![]() Astington, “The Role of Mental State Understanding in the Development of Moral Cognition and Moral Action.” New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 103 (2004), 37–49.īandura, Albert. Illness and Health Care in the Ancient Near East: The Role of the Temple in Greece, Mesopotamia, and Israel. ![]() Studies in Ancient Medicine edited by Herman F. “Healing and Medicine in the Aegean Bronze Age.” Historical Review 89 (1996), 265–270.Īrnott, Robert (2004), “Minoan and Mycenaean Medicine and its Near Eastern Contacts.” In Magic and Rationality in Ancient Near Eastern and Graeco–Roman Medicine. “Culpable Control and the Psychology of Blame.” Psychological Bulletin, 126 (2000), 556–574.Īrnott, Robert. The Athenian Asclepeio, The People, Their Dedications and The Inventories. Understanding of “lived religion” and of multiple religious experiences in various religious contexts.Īleshire, Sara B. Study intends to show how cognitive approaches can enrich historical knowledge on the Asclepius cultĪnd on supplicants’ healing experiences, suggesting that such approaches may contribute to a better Have been perceived and conceptualized as “healing miracles” performed by the god. These cures could have derived from patients’ self-healing mechanisms, but would “lived” an illness or a disease infliction, “appropriated” the religious beliefs in Asclepius, and experiencedĬures at the asclepieia. Powers and the confirmation of this information by human doctors would have influenced how people In thisįramework, it is argued that personal experiences of people, social information about the Asclepius’ healing The prerequisites of placebo effect as determined by Nicholas Humphrey are traced in the wider socialĪnd conceptual contexts of Greek antiquity and the specific religious context of the Asclepius cult. Of healing at the Asclepius sanctuaries is presented as a potential result of the patients’ placebo responses. ![]() Supplicants’ personal experiences of healing during the ritual of incubation. This paper suggests a cognitive approach to the Asclepius cult which may throw light on the
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