All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Hippocrates and the Origins of Western Medicine

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    Hippocrates's name is given to a new form of healing, setting aside superstition and religion in favor of keen observation, medical ethics, recording, and teaching.

  • S01E02 The Paradox of Galen

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    Galen based his career on the idea that understanding disease required understanding the body. His influence was so overwhelming it took 1,400 years before his errors in that understanding began to surface.

  • S01E03 Vesalius and the Renaissance of Medicine

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    An extraordinary volume by a Flemish medical student clarifies the understanding of anatomy of function in ways never imagined before.

  • S01E04 Harvey, Discoverer of the Circulation

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    Harvey's 1628 description of the heart's function and the continuous circulation of the body's blood supply is generally considered the greatest contribution ever made to the art of healing.

  • S01E05 Morgagni and the Anatomy of Disease

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    The Hippocratic thesis that illness originates in an entire person inhibits research, until the work of one man shows that virtually every symptom arises from a specific pathology in a particular structure.

  • S01E06 Hunter, the Surgeon as Scientist

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    At a time when surgeons merely amputated, lanced, and bled at the behest of physicians, John Hunter introduces the notion that they can also be researchers, and brings science into surgery.

  • S01E07 Laennec and the Invention of the Stethoscope

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    Driven by his own embarrassment with the necessities of diagnostic procedure, an intensely shy doctor makes a dramatic advance.

  • S01E08 Morton and the Origins of Anesthesia

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    In the 1840s, nitrous oxide, ether, and chloroform are discovered to have anesthetic properties. The great surge in the possibilities for treatment is accompanied by acrimonious debate among those claiming the credit.

  • S01E09 Virchow and the Cellular Origins of Disease

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    Following the discovery of cells, a German pathologist introduces the concept that disease is caused by pathological change in a previously normal cell. His 1858 book becomes the bible of the new medicine.

  • S01E10 Lister and the Germ Theory

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    An indomitable Quaker physician persists over two decades in his efforts to convince physicians of the causes of postsurgical mortal infection and how to prevent it, revolutionizing medical thinking.

  • S01E11 Halsted and American Medical Education

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    A brilliant young surgeon develops a new paradigm of operating room procedure, transforming surgery and contributing to a new medical school's ascendancy as the model on which all others in the United States would be based.

  • S01E12 Taussig and the Development of Cardiac Surgery

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses

    The Johns Hopkins Medical School is founded on the principle that women must be admitted on the same basis as men. One of its greatest female graduates helps establish the new field of pediatric cardiology.

  • S01E99 About the Professor

    • January 1, 2005
    • The Great Courses