About This Book
The work is an encyclopedic, digressive study of melancholy that defines its varieties, traces causes and symptoms, and surveys prognostics and remedies across philosophical, medical, and historical perspectives. Organized into three major parts with numerous sections and subsections, it interleaves learned citations, literary and anecdotal examples, and personal reflections, moving between clinical description and moral, social, and cultural analysis. Remedies range from dietary and physical regimens to mental therapies such as diversion, company, reading, music, and spiritual consolation. A satirical, erudite voice frames the inquiry, balancing serious medical counsel with wit and broad humanistic learning.
About the Author
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