Cura Te Ipsum

Cura te ipsum ("Physician, heal thyself!") is a classical injunction, urging medical doctors to heal themselves first. This Latin dictum is relevant in many traditional societies in which only the medicine men who already suffered from a given disease are allowed to cure it. Saint Luke the Apostle made Cura te ipsum famous in the Luke 4:23 passage of the Vulgate. A physician himself, Saint Luke must have known the previous conceptual environment of the Hippocratic school, notably its first aphoristic Ars longa, vita brevis, tempus praeceps, judicium difficile,experimentum periculosum ("The art is long, life is short, time is short, decisions are hard, experiment is dangerous") sentence. An adage clearer than Cura te ipsum is hardly possible, for No man, when he hath lighted a candle, putteth it in a secret place. Indeed, the luminous saint Luke the Apostle (with lux, lucis ("light") as etyma for Luca, Lucam ) offered in Secundum Lucam both a pathway of light and a starting point for real cure.

See also

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gravensteen
abdul karim telgi
the civil war (documentary)
otto strandman
battle of chattanooga iii
franz von supp
dnieper river
hackers: heroes of the computer revolution
dnipro (disambiguation)
black beauty
robert anderson
berezina river
valley campaign
babruysk
svetlogorsk
turner ashby
crypto: how the code rebels beat the government saving privacy in the digital age
battle of winchester
saxhorns
spline
achilles' tendon
johan bernhard hjort
power level (dragon ball)
load testing
list of chancellors of the university of cambridge
student pugwash usa
janko group
benito jurez, guerrero
ivo of chartres
1987 rugby union world cup
mathieu group
donovan mcnabb
canada company
thomas fitzsimons
chinese academy of social sciences
osmo vnsk
robert gould shaw
flying cloud
arthralgia
pau hana
hamburg state opera
grand duchy of lithuania
football chant
heribert illig