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  1. If you recognize the name you probably will connect it with the one-man movement championing laughter as a form of medical therapy back in the 1960s. The controversy over this has simmered on and off ever since and perhaps is due for a revisit.

    • Allen B. Weisse
    • 2017
  2. Apr 16, 2024 · The use of laughter has been used in the medical space for centuries, but researchers began collecting data on its use as medicine in the 1960s, after renowned journalist Norman Cousins noted his own medical journey with laughter.

  3. Nov 12, 2017 · Our culture today still bears the imprint of a long-passed system of medicine. From the time of Hippocrates in Ancient Greece through to the dawn of scientific medicine in the 19th century, human temperament was understood in terms of four humours that were thought to exist within the body â?"

  4. When its chief British advocate, Arthur Eddington, announced confirmation of the theory at a meeting of the Royal Society on 6 November 1919, the London Times proclaimed a “scientific revolution” (apparently the first use of the term), and Einstein quickly became a popular hero.

  5. The history of medicine in the United States encompasses a variety of approaches to health care in the United States spanning from colonial days to the present. These interpretations of medicine vary from early folk remedies that fell under various different medical systems to the increasingly standardized and professional managed care of ...

  6. Jul 1, 2002 · But the humoral theory left more than a linguistic legacy. The group of fourth- and third-century BC physicians known as the Hippocratics who formulated (and more importantly wrote about) their theories, were the first organized group to consider that illness had natural—not supernatural—causes. The significance of this change in attention ...

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  8. This chapter explores the enormously influential feminist and queer discourse on laughter inaugurated by Hélène Cixous’s 1975 essay “The Laugh of the Medusa” and continued in different forms by Luce Irigaray, Judith Butler, Jack Halberstam, and others.