The Ethical Basis of Medical PracticeP.B. Hoeber, 1950 - 185 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 24
Side 19
... known in his day . After him the human mind suffered fission . Thereafter it took two men , then four and eight , to know all that was known . Who shall say how many men would be required to compass the sum of knowledge in our own time ...
... known in his day . After him the human mind suffered fission . Thereafter it took two men , then four and eight , to know all that was known . Who shall say how many men would be required to compass the sum of knowledge in our own time ...
Side 87
... known as " empathy . ” As far as I know , the Hippocratic Oath has no parallel in the history of morals . Many ancient religions have the most detailed rules for their priesthoods , but these provisions con- cern ceremonial rather than ...
... known as " empathy . ” As far as I know , the Hippocratic Oath has no parallel in the history of morals . Many ancient religions have the most detailed rules for their priesthoods , but these provisions con- cern ceremonial rather than ...
Side 169
... known to doctors , and should be better known . Personally , I think that his rambling book , Out of My Life and Thought , is the most fascinating modern autobiography I know , because it is so wide - ranging and many - sided ...
... known to doctors , and should be better known . Personally , I think that his rambling book , Out of My Life and Thought , is the most fascinating modern autobiography I know , because it is so wide - ranging and many - sided ...
Indhold
Our Overlapping Professions | 19 |
The Specialist and the General Practitioner | 31 |
The Nature of Conscience | 43 |
Copyright | |
12 andre sektioner vises ikke
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
A. C. Bradley accepted Alexis Carrel American American Medical Association asked attitude become better bladder Cabot called cancer CHAPTER Charles Francis Potter church common concerned conscience court cystoscope death diagnosis dilemma discuss disease doctor duty England Euthanasia Society experience fact faith feel fession finally give given Harvard hospital human ideal individual instance interest Josiah Royce judgments Karl Pearson legalize live Lord Jim Massachusetts General Hospital matter means medical ethics medical profession Medical School mental mind minister ministry modern moral nature never oath once organ pain patient perhaps persons physician practice practitioner principle probably problem professional question religion religious reverence RH negative right and wrong Schweitzer scientist seems sick single situation socialized medicine specialist student suffering suggest surgeon tell thing thought tion told totalitarian tragic truth vivisection warrant whole will-to-live words York