I was year after year associated, and whom it was my duty to study, nothing appears more certain than that the personal character, the very nature, the will, of each student had far greater force in determining his career than any helps or hindrances... Addresses and Other Papers - Side 382af William Williams Keen - 1905 - 441 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| 1876 - 1164 sider
...made themselves worthy of success. Sir James Paget's observations confirm this statement. He says : " Nothing appears more certain than that the personal...forecast of his life in practice, for it will depend on himself a hundred fold more than on circumstances. The time and place, the work to be done, and... | |
| Theophilus Parvin - 1869 - 802 sider
...is very much the exception, rather thsn the rule. And, as Mr. Paget very pertinently remarks, '• nothing appears more certain than that the personal...his career than any helps or hindrances whatever. * * * The time and the place, the work to be done and its responsibilities, will change ; but the man... | |
| Theophilus Parvin - 1869 - 824 sider
...failure is very much the exception, rather than the rule. And, as Mr. 1'agct very pertinently remarks, "nothing appears more certain than that the personal character, the very nature, tho will of each student had far greater force in determining his career than any helps or hindrances... | |
| Charles Booth - 1896 - 522 sider
...was "very limited" is certainly not large. Sir James Paget concludes with the following sentence : " All my recollections would lead me to tell that every...forecast of his life in practice ; for it will depend on himself a hundredfold more than on circumstance." A practitioner, especially if he has a surgery... | |
| Sir James Paget - 1901 - 622 sider
...of the essay, he says, as he always said, that a man is, in practice, what he was as a student : — Nothing appears more certain than that the personal...character, the very nature, the will, of each student has far greater force in determining his career than any helps or hindrances whatever. All my recollections... | |
| Robert Brudenell Carter - 1903 - 336 sider
...In remembering those with whom I was year after year associated, and whom it was my duty to study, nothing appears more certain than that the personal...forecast of his life in practice, for it will depend on himself a hundredfold more than on circumstances. The time and the place, the work to be done and... | |
| Sir James Paget - 1903 - 530 sider
...of the essay, he says, as he always said, that a man is, in practice, what he was as a student : — Nothing appears more certain than that the personal...character, the very nature, the will, of each student has far greater force in determining his career than any helps or hindrances whatever. All my recollections... | |
| Alfred Taylor Schofield - 1904 - 376 sider
...Sir James Paget on medical traced. He says,1 after studying the careers of 200 of his students : ' Nothing appears more certain than that the personal...far greater force in determining his career than any help or hindrance whatever.' And it is the same now — -for the times and the places and the work... | |
| Alfred Taylor Schofield - 1904 - 340 sider
...consideration of the careers of two hundred of his students, which we have already quoted in Chapter VIII. ' Nothing appears more certain than that the personal...each student, had far greater force in determining the career than any help or hindrance whatever.' Ethics, morals, professional conduct, and etiquette,... | |
| 1906 - 658 sider
...his words, and his environment. For this we may take as our text Sir James Paget's well-known words: "Nothing appears more certain than that the personal...character, the very nature, the will of each student, has a far greater force in determining the career than any other help or hindrance whatever." — St.... | |
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