Old Time Makers of MedicineSimon and Schuster, 6 févr. 2013 - 290 pages James Joseph Walsh, M.D., LL.D., Litt.D., Sc.D. (1865-1942) was an American physician and author, born in New York City. He graduated from Fordham College in 1884 and from the University of Pennsylvania (M.D.) in 1895. After postgraduate work in Paris, Vienna, and Berlin he settled in New York. |
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... body and soul, and that the anatomy of his body ought to be a fundamental principle. It is in this little volume that some enthusiastic students have found a description that is to them at least much more than a hint of knowledge of the ...
... body and soul, and that the anatomy of his body ought to be a fundamental principle. It is in this little volume that some enthusiastic students have found a description that is to them at least much more than a hint of knowledge of the ...
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... body, the skull, the thorax, and the abdomen, quite as they are done in our own time and apparently with no little degree of success. Of course, any such extensive surgical intervention even for serious affections would have been worse ...
... body, the skull, the thorax, and the abdomen, quite as they are done in our own time and apparently with no little degree of success. Of course, any such extensive surgical intervention even for serious affections would have been worse ...
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... body should be ascertained in order to get another definite datum in the knowledge of disease. It was long before these suggestions were to bear much fruit, but it is interesting to find them so clearly expressed. At the very end of the ...
... body should be ascertained in order to get another definite datum in the knowledge of disease. It was long before these suggestions were to bear much fruit, but it is interesting to find them so clearly expressed. At the very end of the ...
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... body. Christianity was defined as the religion of healing. The word salvation had a reference to both body and soul. Baptism was spoken of as the bath of the soul, the holy Eucharist as the elixir of immortal life, and penance as the ...
... body. Christianity was defined as the religion of healing. The word salvation had a reference to both body and soul. Baptism was spoken of as the bath of the soul, the holy Eucharist as the elixir of immortal life, and penance as the ...
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... body as representing the necessity for design in creation. His teleological arguments have much more force now than they would have had for people generally twenty years ago. We have come back to recognize the place of teleology ...
... body as representing the necessity for design in creation. His teleological arguments have much more force now than they would have had for people generally twenty years ago. We have come back to recognize the place of teleology ...
Table des matières
Great Jewish Physicians | |
Great Arabian Physicians | |
The Medical School at Salerno | |
Great Surgeons of the Medieval Universities | |
Guy De Chauliac | |
Medieval Dentistrygiovanni of Arcoli | |
Cusanus and the First Suggestion of Laboratory Methods in Medicine | |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Old-time Makers of Medicine: The Story of the Students and Teachers of the ... James Joseph Walsh Affichage du livre entier - 1911 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Abulcasis accomplished Aëtius Albertus Magnus anatomy Arabian Arabs Arculanus Aristotle attention authority Averroës Avicenna Basil Valentine became Benedictine body Bologna called cautery chapter Christian Constantine cure Cusanus dentistry devoted diseases dissection distinguished early ecclesiastical especially Europe evidence fact fourteenth century Galen Greek Gurlt Guy de Chauliac Hippocrates history of medicine human idea important influence intellectual interesting Italian Italy Jewish physicians Jews knowledge Lanfranc literature Luke Maimonides matter medical education medical school medical science medicine and surgery medieval universities method Middle Ages modern Mondeville Mondino monks Monte Cassino observation oldtime operations Pagel patient period philosophy physician Popes probably Professor quoted regard Renaissance Rhazes Roger Bacon Roman Salernitan Salerno says scholars scientific seems Spain succeeding suggested surgeons surgical surprising teachers teaching teeth textbook therapeutics things thirteenth century thought tradition translation treatise treatment wine women wounds writings wrote