A thousand years ago, one man wrote the medical textbook that would teach the world to heal. His ancient remedies are now being proven right.
Abu Ali ibn Sina - known to the West as Avicenna - was a physician, philosopher, and polymath whose Canon of Medicine served as the standard medical textbook in Europe and the Islamic world for over six centuries. Sir William Osler called it "the most famous medical textbook ever written."
But The Avicenna Effect is not just a history book. It is a bridge. Drawing on the latest peer-reviewed research, author Ferruh Gün - a Turkish legal scholar and sociologist - reveals how modern science is validating what Avicenna knew a millennium ago:
- Saffron as an antidepressant - confirmed by 5 randomized controlled trials
- Black seed (Nigella sativa) for immune health - validated by Frontiers in Nutrition (2023)
- Garlic for cardiovascular protection - supported by a Cochrane systematic review
- Turmeric for inflammation - backed by 3,000+ published studies
- The world's earliest clinical trial protocol - recognized by the Annals of Internal Medicine (2009)
Inside this book, you will discover: - The five books of the Canon of Medicine, analyzed with modern academic sources
- 20+ ancient medicinal recipes compared with contemporary scientific evidence
- Avicenna's pioneering contributions to surgery, mental health, and preventive medicine
- The Canon's journey from Persia to the Ottoman Empire to European universities
- How Avicenna's holistic, patient-centered philosophy anticipates 21st-century integrative medicine
>Who is this book for? Healthcare professionals seeking historical perspective. Medical and history students. Researchers in pharmacology and integrative medicine. Anyone curious about how ancient wisdom and modern science are converging to shape the future of healing.
"The most famous medical textbook ever written; a medical bible for a longer time than any other work." - Sir William Osler