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Ideas about health

Rana Mitter and guests look at different ideas about health from the 17th century author of The Religion of a Physician to John Berger's 1967 depiction of a country doctor.

Edinburgh GP Gavin Francis has been reading the writings of Thomas Browne (1605 -1682), who travelled to Padua and Leiden to qualify in medicine and then wrote on topics including religion, burial and examples of false understanding of science at the time. A Fortunate Woman - a depiction of a country doctor working now - takes inspiration from A Fortunate Man published in 1967 by John Berger and photographer Jean Mohr. Author Polly Morland joins Gavin Francis and New Generation Thinker Matt Smith from Strathclyde University, who is working on a history of health and medicine and who researches mental health, to discuss with Rana Mitter how our ideas have changed.

Producer: Julian Siddle

You can hear Gavin Francis discussing Ancient Wisdom and Remote Living in a previous Free Thinking episode available on ±«Óãtv Sounds and as the Arts & Ideas podcast /programmes/m000q3by
There's more about Thomas Browne in an episode devoted to his writings /programmes/p02tw4xw
Matt Smith discusses Ritalin in an episode about Resting and Rushing /programmes/m000bp2c and an Essay for Radio 3 looks at The Magic Years, a manuscript found in the American Psychiatric Association archives, written when the eradication of mental illness was believed possible /programmes/b08j9x3c
Ways of Talking about Health looks at new research from UK universities /programmes/m000q12w
Mental Health hears from Human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith and New Generation Thinker Dr Sabina Dosani /programmes/m0016ynv

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45 minutes

Podcast