Anonymous ID: 46cf66 Jan. 15, 2024, 8:16 a.m. No.20245617   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5627

>>20245571

 

have most of these books

 

and

There would be absolutely NO 'medicine' without 'WEEDS'

 

https://wssa.net/wp-content/uploads/Henkel_1904_Weeds-used-in-medicine.pdf

 

what part of 'you can not patent a plant' did you miss?

Anonymous ID: 46cf66 Jan. 15, 2024, 8:28 a.m. No.20245677   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5699 >>5713 >>5722 >>5731

>>20245627

 

that is the Materia Medica anon

 

De materia medica (Latin name for the Greek work Περὶ ὕλης ἰατρικῆς, Peri hulēs iatrikēs, both meaning "On Medical Material") is a pharmacopoeia of medicinal plants and the medicines that can be obtained from them. The five-volume work was written between 50 and 70 CE by Pedanius Dioscorides, a Greek physician in the Roman army. It was widely read for more than 1,500 years until supplanted by revised herbals in the Renaissance, making it one of the longest-lasting of all natural history and pharmacology books.

 

The work describes many drugs known to be effective, including aconite, aloes, colocynth, colchicum, henbane, opium and squill. In all, about 600 plants are covered, along with some animals and mineral substances, and around 1000 medicines made from them.

 

De materia medica wascirculated as illustrated manuscripts, copied by hand,in Greek, Latin and Arabic throughout the mediaeval period. From the 16th century on, Dioscorides' text was translated into Italian, German, Spanish, and French, and in 1655 into English.

 

Several manuscripts and early printed versions of De materia medica survive, including the illustrated Vienna Dioscurides manuscript written in the original Greek in 6th-century Constantinople; it was used there by the Byzantines as a hospital text for just over a thousand years. Sir Arthur Hill saw a monk on Mount Athos still using a copy of Dioscorides to identify plants in 1934.

 

Between 50 and 70 AD, a Greek physician in the Roman army, Dioscorides, wrote a five-volume book in his native Greek, Περὶ ὕλης ἰατρικῆς (Peri hules iatrikēs, "On Medical Material"), known more widely in Western Europe by its Latin title De materia medica. He had studied pharmacology at Tarsus in Roman Anatolia (now Turkey).[1]The book became the principal reference work on pharmacology across Europe and the Middle East for over 1,500 years,[2] and was thus the precursor of all modern pharmacopoeias.[3][4]

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_materia_medica

 

nothing new under the sun

just hidden

Anonymous ID: 46cf66 Jan. 15, 2024, 9:45 a.m. No.20246054   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6061

1232

Q !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: b7a0ab No.1133464 📁

Apr 21 2018 14:15:51 (EST)

 

Q !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: b7a0ab No.1133332 📁

Apr 21 2018 14:10:43 (EST)

 

What will next week hold?

MOAB.

Q

 

>>1133332

Fire up those Memes!

Please stand by.

On the clock.

Ready to play?

MOAB incoming.

Q

Anonymous ID: 46cf66 Jan. 15, 2024, 10:16 a.m. No.20246277   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20246133

 

3rd temple long been built

just waiting for awakening

GREAT AWAKENING

 

the Temple

 

It's technically where four skull bones—the frontal, parietal, temporal, and sphenoid—meet in the skull. This vulnerable juncture is called the pterion, which means "wing" in Greek but sounds like a kind of dinosaur.

 

Etymologists don't entirely agree on the meaning of the word temple, which has multiple origins. It may derive from the Latin word for time, tempus, according to a Dartmouth Medical School anatomy course: "The connection may be that with the passage of time, grey hairs appear here early on. Or it may relate to the pulsations of the underlying superficial temporal artery, marking the time we have left here."

 

It could also possibly hail from the Greek word temenos, meaning "place cut off," which would explain the idea of a temple of worship as well as that juncture of bones at the side of the head.

 

In Old English, tempel meant "any place regarded as occupied by divine presence," which might be code for the brain as the residence of consciousness or God.

 

More likely it's related to the Greek pterion, which as you'll recall means "wing." In Greek mythology, Hermes, messenger of the gods, wore a helmet with wings, which were positioned over the temples.

 

https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/502709/8-little-known-facts-about-temple