Philistion of Locri (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Φιλιστίων) was a Greek physician, medical and dietary author[1] who lived in the 4th century BC.
He was a native of Locri in Magna Graecia,[2] but was also referred to as "the Sicilian."[3] He was tutor to the physician Chrysippus of Cnidos,[4] and the astronomer and physician Eudoxus,[5] and therefore must have lived in the 4th century BC. He was one of those who defended the opinion that what is drunk goes into the lungs.[6] Some ancient writers attributed to Philistion the treatise De Salubri Victus Ratione,[7] and also the De Victus Ratione,[8] both of which form part of the Hippocratic collection. By some persons he was considered one of the founders of the Empiric school.[9] He wrote a work on materia medica,[10] and on Cookery,[11] and is several times quoted by Pliny,[12] and Galen.[13] Oribasius attributes to him the invention of a machine for restoring dislocations of the humerus.[14]
A brother of Philistion, who was also a physician, but whose name is not known, is quoted by Caelius Aurelianus.[15]