Discourses on practical physicJ. & A. Churchill, 1871 - 93 pages |
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Page 21
... pathologist , this a diagnostic , that a thera- peutist ? ' Tis trifling with nature . Test the matter by com- parison . There is before us a mechanism , an engine which we have not invented , and the action of which we know not . To ...
... pathologist , this a diagnostic , that a thera- peutist ? ' Tis trifling with nature . Test the matter by com- parison . There is before us a mechanism , an engine which we have not invented , and the action of which we know not . To ...
Page 22
... pathologist , a great physiologist , a great anatomist , a great diagnostician , a great microscopist , but a great physician he must not be ; nay , after isolating his own great- ness as widely as possible from other greatnesses , and ...
... pathologist , a great physiologist , a great anatomist , a great diagnostician , a great microscopist , but a great physician he must not be ; nay , after isolating his own great- ness as widely as possible from other greatnesses , and ...
Page 34
... pathologist is an abstraction , while the therapeutist is a sceptical believer , who fears to trust , dares not mistrust , and relies on an experience which varies like the deceitful sea . The simple relations of force to matter ...
... pathologist is an abstraction , while the therapeutist is a sceptical believer , who fears to trust , dares not mistrust , and relies on an experience which varies like the deceitful sea . The simple relations of force to matter ...
Page 36
... pathologist , and in time will be taken into consideration in the study of all those actions and func tions of living things which are commonly distinguished as " vital . " I have my . self , in one line of research , endeavoured to ...
... pathologist , and in time will be taken into consideration in the study of all those actions and func tions of living things which are commonly distinguished as " vital . " I have my . self , in one line of research , endeavoured to ...
Page 53
... pathological point of view . The symptom was this . When the intermittent action of the heart was at its worst there came on in the fingers of one or other hand a sensation of coldness and numbness , followed instantly by quick ...
... pathological point of view . The symptom was this . When the intermittent action of the heart was at its worst there came on in the fingers of one or other hand a sensation of coldness and numbness , followed instantly by quick ...
Common terms and phrases
alcohol ALEXANDER ARMSTRONG Anatomy animal arterial Auscultation BEALE blood body brain bromide of quinine carotid canal cause cerebral CHEMISTRY chest Churchill CLIMATE CLINICAL Coloured Plates Crown 8vo debility DIAGNOSIS digested DISEASES disorder dose drachm dúp dyspepsia Engravings on Wood EPILEPSY excitement failure Fcap feeble Fifth Edition fluid drachm fluid ounces Foolscap Foolscap 8vo Fourth Edition ganglia GOUT heart Hospital hydrobromic acid Hygiene Illustrations intermittent action intermittent pulse irregular action irritation Journal labour LECTURES M.D.LOND MANUAL MATERIA MEDICA Medical MEDICINE mental strain Midwifery mind morphine motion muscular natural nervous system numerous Engravings observation OBSTETRIC organic ORTHOPRAXY palpitation paralysis Pathology Pathology and Treatment patient physical physician PHYSIOLOGY pneumogastric Post 8vo PRINCIPLES Prize Essay profession quackery RECTUM remedy RHEUMATIC Second Edition simple syrup Skin sleep sound stomach structure strychnine suffer from intermittent Surgery Surgical symptom Syphilis syrup Therapeutics Third Edition tion unity URINARY Urinary Organs Uterine ventricle wwwww
Popular passages
Page 1 - So I returned, and considered all the oppressions that are done under the sun: and behold the tears of such as were oppressed, and they had no comforter; and on the side of their oppressors there was power; but they had no comforter. Wherefore I praised the dead which are already dead more than the living which are yet alive.
Page 80 - MR. LIONEL J. BEALE, MRCS THE LAWS OF HEALTH IN THEIR RELATIONS TO MIND AND BODY. A Series of Letters from an Old Practitioner to a Patient.
Page 88 - DR. DJT FRANCIS. CHANGE OF CLIMATE; considered as a Remedy in Dyspeptic, Pulmonary, and other Chronic Affections; with an Account of the most Eligible Places of Residence for Invalids in Spain, Portugal, Algeria...
Page iv - Intended as a Source of Easy Reference for Clergymen, and for Families residing at a Distance from Professional Assistance.
Page 71 - Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal. " No one is more distinguished for the elegance and recherche" style of his publications than Mr. Churchill.
Page 88 - Diagrams of the Nerves of the Human Body, exhibiting their Origin, Divisions, and Connexions, with their Distribution to the various Regions of the Cutaneous Surface, and to all the Muscles. By WILLIAM H.
Page 85 - MR. JOHN CLAY, MRCS KIWISCH ON DISEASES OF THE OVARIES: Translated, by permission, from the last German Edition of his Clinical Lectures on the Special Pathology and Treatment of the Diseases of Women. With Notes, and an Appendix on the Operation of Ovariotomy. Royal 12mo. cloth, 16s.
Page vii - PRACTICAL LITHOTOMY AND LITHOTRITY; or, An inquiry into the best Modes of removing Stone from the Bladder.