Doctor in Medicine: and Other Papers on Professional SubjectsArno Press, 1972 - 308 sider |
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Side 41
... evil of the profession of our times . It is not only the grand obstacle to the constant acquisition of knowledge , which should character- ize the true physician , but it leads him into evil practices and unprofessional associations ...
... evil of the profession of our times . It is not only the grand obstacle to the constant acquisition of knowledge , which should character- ize the true physician , but it leads him into evil practices and unprofessional associations ...
Side 42
... evil times upon which we are thought to have fallen , and of which we hear such frequent complaints . The remedy , like the evil , is in the profession itself . The line between the true and false , the honest and the dishonest , can ...
... evil times upon which we are thought to have fallen , and of which we hear such frequent complaints . The remedy , like the evil , is in the profession itself . The line between the true and false , the honest and the dishonest , can ...
Side 82
... evil , no rational person can deny . The very definition of the term implies the moral destruction of one human being , and the physical deterioration or death of another . The history of the miserable victim of seduction may too often ...
... evil , no rational person can deny . The very definition of the term implies the moral destruction of one human being , and the physical deterioration or death of another . The history of the miserable victim of seduction may too often ...
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DOCTOR IN MEDICINE | 1 |
EMPLOYMENT OF ANÆSTHETICS | 6 |
PHYSICIAN AND APOTHECARY | 13 |
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American amputation anesthetic apothecary army attendance battle of Solferino body cause character child chloro chloroform civil clinical conscripts coroner courts crime Crimean war criminal cure death diseased meat dispensing Chemists doubt druggist duties effect emigration eminent empiricism established evidence evil examination fact fatal female nurses fession fever frequently give given graduates Hippocrates honor hospitals ical important influence institutions instruction jects knowledge labor latter laws medi medical education medical profession medicine ment midwifery mind moral nature never obstetrics operation opinion organization paralysis patient periosteum persons physician poison position prac practice practitioner present profes professional proper quackery qualified question ranks reform regard remedies result Sabbath schools sician sick skill small-pox social society student success surgeon surgery surgical teaching tical tion true truth typhus wards wet-nursing witness wounds WRITER'S CRAMP