Tekiner Halil
Department of the History of Pharmacy and Ethics, Erciyes University School of Pharmacy, 38039, Kayseri, Turkey.
J Bioeth Inq. 2017 Sep;14(3):445-449. doi: 10.1007/s11673-017-9789-6. Epub 2017 Jun 20.
The Ottoman physician-poet Nidai of Ankara (1509 to post-1567) studied medicine in Crimea and served as a court physician in Istanbul during the reign of Sultan Selim II. Nidai marked the classical period of Ottoman medicine particularly with his acclaimed works and translations in Turkish, among which Manafi al-Nas (Benefits of People, 1566) became widely known. The final chapter of Manafi al-Nas also is known independently under the name Vasiyyetname (Last Will), which is a remarkable guide on medical ethics. This didactic, sixty-eight-line poem includes Nidai's moral advice to physicians that they should be well mannered, trustworthy, and competent in their arts and should treat their patients with modesty, honesty, and compassion. Even after 450 years of existence, Vasiyyetname retains its ethical and artistic relevance and still serves as a vehicle for the transmission of humanistic ideals far beyond the time and place it was written.
奥斯曼帝国的医生兼诗人、来自安卡拉的尼代(1509年至1567年之后)曾在克里米亚学习医学,并在苏丹塞利姆二世统治期间担任伊斯坦布尔的宫廷医生。尼代尤其以其广受赞誉的土耳其语著作和翻译作品,标志着奥斯曼医学的古典时期,其中《人类的益处》(1566年)广为人知。《人类的益处》的最后一章也以《遗嘱》之名独立为人所知,它是医学伦理学方面的杰出指南。这首说教性质的、有六十八行的诗歌包含了尼代给医生们的道德建议,即他们应该举止得体、值得信赖且技艺娴熟,并且应该以谦逊、诚实和同情之心对待患者。即使在问世450年后,《遗嘱》依然保持着其伦理和艺术价值,并且仍然作为一种载体,将人文主义理想传播到远超其创作的时间和地点之外。