William Osler: A Life in MedicineOxford University Press, 18. nov. 1999 - 632 sider William Osler was born in a parsonage in backwoods Canada on July 12, 1849. In a life lasting seventy years, he practiced, taught, and wrote about medicine at Canada's McGill University, America's Johns Hopkins University, and finally as Regius Professor at Oxford. At the time of his death in England in 1919, many considered him to be the greatest doctor in the world. Osler, who was a brilliant, innovative teacher and a scholar of the natural history of disease, revolutionized the art of practicing medicine at the bedside of his patients. He was idolized by two generations of medical students and practitioners for whom he came to personify the ideal doctor. But much more than a physician, Osler was a supremely intelligent humanist. In both his writings and his personal life, and through the prism of the tragedy of the Great War, he embodied the art of living. It was perhaps his legendary compassion that elevated his healing talents to an art form and attracted to his private practice students, colleagues, poets (Walt Whitman for example) politicians, royalty, and nameless ordinary people with extraordinary conditions. William Osler's life lucidly illuminates the times in which he lived. Indeed, this is a book not only about the evolution of modern medicine, the training of doctors, holism in medical thought, and the doctor-patient relationship, but also about humanism, Victorianism, the Great War, and much else. Meticulously researched, drawing on many new sources and offering new interpretations, William Osler: A Life in Medicine brings to life both a fascinating man and the formative age of twentieth-century medicine. It is a classic biography of a classic life, both authoritative and highly readable. |
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Side iv
... Toronto Warsaw and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan Copyright © 1999 by Michael Bliss Published by Oxford University Press , Inc. 198 Madison Avenue , New York , New York 10016 Published in Canada by the University of Toronto Press ...
... Toronto Warsaw and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan Copyright © 1999 by Michael Bliss Published by Oxford University Press , Inc. 198 Madison Avenue , New York , New York 10016 Published in Canada by the University of Toronto Press ...
Side 3
... Toronto . At the time of Osier's birth , Bond Head was still a frontier station on the edge of a savage wilderness . Thou- sands of miles across the Atlantic , Victorian Britain was approaching the height of its power , prestige , and ...
... Toronto . At the time of Osier's birth , Bond Head was still a frontier station on the edge of a savage wilderness . Thou- sands of miles across the Atlantic , Victorian Britain was approaching the height of its power , prestige , and ...
Side 16
... Toronto , the Lake Ontario town that served as provincial capital of Upper Canada . During the Seven Years ' War , which had ended in 1763 , Great Britain had conquered the land known as New France or Canada or Quebec . In the following ...
... Toronto , the Lake Ontario town that served as provincial capital of Upper Canada . During the Seven Years ' War , which had ended in 1763 , Great Britain had conquered the land known as New France or Canada or Quebec . In the following ...
Side 17
... Toronto.33 It was only a few miles , less than an hour's drive today , from the church spires and semi - refined society taking shape in muddy Toronto to the back- woods townships where the Osiers were to live and preach . In 1837 the ...
... Toronto.33 It was only a few miles , less than an hour's drive today , from the church spires and semi - refined society taking shape in muddy Toronto to the back- woods townships where the Osiers were to live and preach . In 1837 the ...
Side 19
... Toronto to overthrow British rule . ' The people seemed panic - struck , ' Featherstone wrote in his journal . The Anglican Church gave unqualified support to the state , and Osier rode late into the night , ' giving intelligence ...
... Toronto to overthrow British rule . ' The people seemed panic - struck , ' Featherstone wrote in his journal . The Anglican Church gave unqualified support to the state , and Osier rode late into the night , ' giving intelligence ...
Indhold
3 | |
36 | |
3 The Baby Professor | 80 |
Philadelphia | 122 |
5 Starting at Johns Hopkins | 168 |
6 We All Worship Him | 208 |
Illustrations | 210 |
7 The Great American Doctor | 259 |
10 Sir William | 369 |
11 All the Youth and Glory of the Country | 402 |
12 Never Use a Crutch | 441 |
13 Oslers Afterlife | 477 |
Notes and Sources | 505 |
Acknowledgments | 557 |
Illustration Credits | 561 |
Index | 563 |
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