The History of medicine comprising a narrative of its progress from the earliest ages to the present timeLongman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, 1861 - 483 pages |
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Page 2
... success being his only distinction , and quackery the shortest and most certain road to it . Military and naval aspirants have their superior officers , with skill to decide upon , and authority to dispense rewards to the highest merit ...
... success being his only distinction , and quackery the shortest and most certain road to it . Military and naval aspirants have their superior officers , with skill to decide upon , and authority to dispense rewards to the highest merit ...
Page 10
... success- fully to the pursuit of medicine . He was considered so skilled in the remedial powers of plants , and so miraculously fortunate in the use of them , that he was called the inventor as well as the god of medicine , and received ...
... success- fully to the pursuit of medicine . He was considered so skilled in the remedial powers of plants , and so miraculously fortunate in the use of them , that he was called the inventor as well as the god of medicine , and received ...
Page 11
... successful issue . Faith was also de- manded , and with these qualifications admission was granted to the officiating priest , who was surrounded by all kinds of cabalistic symbols , and practised such mysterious ceremonies as were ...
... successful issue . Faith was also de- manded , and with these qualifications admission was granted to the officiating priest , who was surrounded by all kinds of cabalistic symbols , and practised such mysterious ceremonies as were ...
Page 25
... successful practitioners towards their brethren , however disinterested they may be towards the public . It has been stated , that having extracted all the information which the records contained in the temple of Cnidos could yield him ...
... successful practitioners towards their brethren , however disinterested they may be towards the public . It has been stated , that having extracted all the information which the records contained in the temple of Cnidos could yield him ...
Page 39
... the same ambiguous character , and with the same dubious success . Themison of Laodicea , the pupil of Asclepiades , dissented from both Dogmatists and Empirics ; asserting , on the one hand , that the science of medicine D4.
... the same ambiguous character , and with the same dubious success . Themison of Laodicea , the pupil of Asclepiades , dissented from both Dogmatists and Empirics ; asserting , on the one hand , that the science of medicine D4.
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