Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A simple drawing of the Bowl of Hygieia. The Bowl of Hygieia, 馃晱 , is one of the symbols of pharmacology, and along with the Rod of Asclepius, it is one of the most ancient and important symbols related to medicine in western countries.
This article about a location in ancient Thrace is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
In doing so, he attacks the boundary between inside and outside, declaring that the outside (pharmakos, never uttered by Plato) is always-already present right behind the inside (pharmakeia–pharmakon–pharmakeus). As a concept, Pharmakos can be said to be related to other Derridian terms such as "Trace".
The King James Version uses the words witch, witchcraft, and witchcrafts to translate the Masoretic 讻指旨砖址讈祝 k膩sháf (Hebrew pronunciation:) and 拽侄住侄诐 (qésem); [10] these same English terms are used to translate φαρμακε委α pharmakeia in the Greek New Testament.
The word pharmacy is derived from Old French farmacie "substance, such as a food or in the form of a medicine which has a laxative effect" from Medieval Latin pharmacia from Greek pharmakeia (Ancient Greek: φαρμακε委α) "a medicine", which itself derives from pharmakon (φ维ρμακον), meaning "drug, poison, spell" [44] [45] [a ...
Pharmacia company was founded in 1911 in Stockholm, Sweden by pharmacist Gustav Felix Grönfeldt at the Elgen Pharmacy. [1] [2] The company was named after the Greek word φαρμακε委α, transliterated pharmakeia, which means 'sorcery'.
In critical theory, pharmakon is a concept introduced by Jacques Derrida.It is derived from the Greek source term φ维ρμακον (phármakon), a word that can mean either remedy, poison, or scapegoat.
Orithyia was the fifth daughter of King Erechtheus of Athens and his wife, Praxithea, daughter of Phrasimus and Diogeneia. [1] She was sister to Cecrops, Pandorus, Metion, Protogeneia, Pandora, Procris, Creusa, and Chthonia. [2]