Global Journal of Medical Research, K: Interdisciplinary, Volume 22 Issue 1

© 2022. Zsuzsanna Kutasi. This research/review article is distributed under the terms of the Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). You must give appropriate credit to authors and reference this article if parts of the article are reproduced in any manner. Applicable licensing terms are at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc- nd/4.0/. Global Journal of Medical Research: K Interdisciplinary Volume 22 Issue 1 Version 1.0 Year 2022 Type: Double Blind Peer Reviewed International Research Journal Publisher: Global Journals Online ISSN: 2249-4618 & Print ISSN: 0975-5888 Basics of the Medieval Arabic Medicine: The Vascular Systems in the Canon of Medicine of Avicenna Incorporating a Translation of a Part of the First Book By Zsuzsanna Kutasi Eötvös Loránd University Abstract- Drawing on the knowledge accumulated by the ancient Greek philosophers, medieval Arabic theoretical anatomy seeks to describe the organs, their roles and functions as well as their mutual relationships, embedding this description within a philosophical framework wherever higher or subordinate roles can be ascribed to the particular organs being discussed. According to Ibn S ī n ā (Ab ū ‘Al ī al- Ḥ usayn b. ‘Al ī )(Avicenna) (370-428 AH/980-1037 AD), everything in nature is connected with everything else, and the main operator of the body is the immortal divine soul ( r ūḥ ). In the process of breathing, a part of the divine soul enters the lungs and then, being mixed with blood, the heart as well, in which the 'pneuma' is formed, which is channeled by the arteries throughout the body. The soul part of the inhaled air ( al-haw āʼ ) regulates the heart’s heat and nourishes it. According to Ibn S ī n ā , the heart has three cavities: one on the right side, one on the left side, and the third in the middle, which serves as a kind of blood store. The liver governs the right side, the spleen governs the left one. Keywords: anatomy, blood-system, Islamic medicine, Avicenna, Ibn S ī n ā . GJMR-K Classification: NLMC Code: WT 115 BasicsoftheMedievalArabicMedicineTheVascularSystemsintheCanonofMedicineofAvicennaIncorporatingaTranslationofaPartoftheFirstBook Strictly as per the compliance and regulations of:

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