Dr. Jacobi's Works: Collected Essays, Addresses, Scientific Papers and Miscellaneous Writings of A. Jacobi ..., Bind 6Critic and guide Company, 1909 |
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Side 9
... profession . My life - work has been directed by something like the dictum of Paracelsus , that " true art is not so much re- vealed by knowing as by acting . " Thus I have the honor of addressing you from the stand - point of the prac ...
... profession . My life - work has been directed by something like the dictum of Paracelsus , that " true art is not so much re- vealed by knowing as by acting . " Thus I have the honor of addressing you from the stand - point of the prac ...
Side 10
... profession and its councils , may you never forget that , as soon as the scientific concerns cease to prevail over the social , as soon as thousands flock together for the en- joyment of entertainments , excursions , and festivities ...
... profession and its councils , may you never forget that , as soon as the scientific concerns cease to prevail over the social , as soon as thousands flock together for the en- joyment of entertainments , excursions , and festivities ...
Side 11
... profession . A young medical man who runs off into a specialty , honestly believing that a hu- man organ can be studied and treated separately , like the wheel of a watch , has not intellect enough to be a physi- cian , and ought to ...
... profession . A young medical man who runs off into a specialty , honestly believing that a hu- man organ can be studied and treated separately , like the wheel of a watch , has not intellect enough to be a physi- cian , and ought to ...
Side 12
... profession from its own members . Through anxiety to do good , and through prematurely jumping at conclusions from a newly dis- covered fact , we are liable to promise too much , and in- advertently run after fads . Quod cupimus et ...
... profession from its own members . Through anxiety to do good , and through prematurely jumping at conclusions from a newly dis- covered fact , we are liable to promise too much , and in- advertently run after fads . Quod cupimus et ...
Side 16
... profession through its own fault , I gradu- ally glided into the discussion of injuries inflicted upon the well or sick . That was my main object , and I shall now continue to do so . But you will bear with me when I say just here that ...
... profession through its own fault , I gradu- ally glided into the discussion of injuries inflicted upon the well or sick . That was my main object , and I shall now continue to do so . But you will bear with me when I say just here that ...
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Dr. Jacobi's Works: Collected Essays, Addresses, Scientific Papers and ... Abraham Jacobi Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2019 |
DR JACOBIS WORKS COLL ESSAYS A, Bind 4 A. (Abraham) 1830-1919 Jacobi,William J. (William Josephus) Robinson Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2016 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
admission admitted adult amongst asphyxia asylum average babies better blood Board born brain cause cent cerebral charge child Child's Hospital chronic clinical condition criminal cure danger death diagnosis diarrhoea died digitalis diphtheria disease doctor doses drugs epilepsy Expectant treatment fact favorable fever fontanelles foundling hospital frequent guaiacol heart hemorrhage Hippocrates human illegitimate improvement individual infants influence insanity institution knowledge labor large number latter living means medicine ment milk modern monism months mortality mother nature nurses nursling operation orphans ossification patient persons physician pneumonia poor practice practitioners prevent profession prognosis prove puerperal fever pulmonary quack quinine Randall's Island sepsis sewer air sewer gas sick spartein specialists strychnine symptoms syphilis teaching therapy theria tion tuberculosis typhoid typhoid fever wet-nurses York young
Populære passager
Side 135 - I will follow that system of regimen which, according to my ability and judgment, I consider for the benefit of my patients, and abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous.
Side 166 - I firmly believe that if the whole materia medica, as now used, could be sunk to the bottom of the sea, it would be all the better for mankind, — and all the worse for the fishes.
Side 280 - The Foundling Asylum of the Sisters of Charity in the City of New York," but at that time it was changed to its present form.
Side 92 - They act on the sick by causing a disease similar to that which is to be combated, and which dissolves itself into this similar affection. The full doses required to cause symptoms in the well are too large to be employed as remedies for the sick. The healing power of a drug grows in an inverse proportion to its substance. He says literally: " Only potencies are homeopathic medicines.
Side 133 - The only vocation of the physician is to heal; theoretical knowledge is of no use. In a case of sickness he should only know what is curable, and the remedies. Of the diseases he cannot know anything except the symptoms. There are internal changes, but it is impossible to learn what they are; symptoms alone are accessible; with their removal by remedies the disease is removed.
Side 154 - Code as a law-book, as noue was required to guide our methods of intercourse, the observance of the rules valid amongst gentlemen became even stricter in the profession of the State of New York than ever before. The result was, however, that our affiliation with the American Medical Association was interrupted. But such has been the gradual change of public opinion that the American Medical Association saw its way two years ago to abolish the Code as a law-book enforcing obedience and to recommend...
Side 388 - The brains of criminals exhibit a deviation from the normal type, and criminals are to be viewed as an anthropological variety of their species, at least among the cultured races.
Side 133 - ... prepared and used for the purpose. One day Mesmer, having bled a patient, accidentally passed his hand over the cicatrix, or lance puncture, and observed that his hand produced the exact results, which had hitherto been produced by the magnets. Mesmer, from the nature of his inaugural thesis "On the Influence of the Planets on the Human Body...
Side 166 - Throw out opium and a few specifics which our art did not discover and is hardly needed to apply ; throw out wine which is a food and the vapors which produce the miracle of anesthesia, and I firmly believe that if the whole materia medica as now used, could be sunk in the bottom of the sea, it would be better for mankind and worse for the fishes.
Side 167 - It is not of the slightest interest to the patient to know whether three or three and a quarter cubic inches of his lung are hepatized. His mind is not occupied with thinking of the curious problems which are to be solved by his own autopsy, — whether this or that strand of the spinal marrow is the seat of this or that form of degeneration. He wants something to relieve his pain, to mitigate...