... condition of doctrinal pathology must necessarily partake of whatever imperfection may be found in the correlative science of physiology. Again, we have attained to a great degree of certainty in the detection of disease in the living body. The Saint Louis Medical Reporter - Page 6111869Full view - About this book
| Homeopathy - 1848 - 494 pages
...detection and discrimination of disease in the " living body. We know tolerably well what it is that we have to deal with ; '' but we do not know so well...— nor anything like so well — how to deal with " i' This is more true, no doubt, in the province of the physician, than in "that of the surgeon; but... | |
| Medicine - 1870 - 588 pages
...science of medicine is to be found in its final and supreme state — the stage of therapeutics." " We know tolerably well what it is we have to deal...well, nor anything like so well, how to deal with it." "To me it has been a lifelong wonder how vaguely, how ignorantly, how rashly drugs are often prescribed.... | |
| William Sharp - Alternative medicine - 1874 - 848 pages
...detection and discrimination of disease in the living body. We know tolerably 'well what it is that we have to deal with ; but we do not know so well — nor anything like so well — Jtow to deal with it. ... We want to learn distinctly and clearly what is the action of drugs,... | |
| 1875 - 756 pages
...detection and discrimination of disease in the " living body. We know tolerably well what it is that we have to deal with ; " but we do not know so well...is lamentably true in both provinces. We want " to leam distinctly and clearly what is the action of drugs and of other out" ward influences upon the... | |
| Homeopathy - 1875 - 650 pages
...detection and discrimination of disease in the " living body. We know tolerably well what it is that we have to deal with • " but we do not know so well...like so well — how to deal with " it. This is more (rue, no doubt, in the province of the physician, than in " that of the surgeon ; but it is lamentably... | |
| Homeopathy - 1893 - 360 pages
...is that we have to deal !Read before the Saginaw Valley Homoeopathic Society, September i2th, 1893. with; but we do not know so well — nor anything like so well — how to deal with it." And then he said, in the very faces of the first physicians of Great Britain: "To me it has been a... | |
| 1893 - 790 pages
...therapeutics " as " the greatest gap in the science of medicine," he went on presently to say that " we want to learn distinctly what is the action of drugs and other outward influences upon bodily organs and functions." To acquire this knowledge, Sin THOMAS relied chiefly upon clinical experience,... | |
| Homeopathy - 1869 - 604 pages
...detection and discrimination of disease in the living body. We know tolerably well what it is that we have to deal with, but we do not know so well,...learn distinctly what is the action of drugs, and of other outward influences, upon the bodily organs and functions, — for everyone now-a-days, I suppose,... | |
| Medicine - 1871 - 496 pages
...in the science of medicine is to be found in its final and supreme stage, the stage of therapeutics. We know tolerably well what it is we have to deal...well, nor anything like so well, how to deal with it. To me it has been a life-long wonder how vaguely, how ignorantly, how rashly drugs are often prescribed.... | |
| Homeopathy - 1868 - 618 pages
...science of medicine is to be found in its final and supreme stage, — the stage of Therapeutics1. We know tolerably well what it is we have to deal...well, nor anything like so well, how to deal with it. We want to know distinctly what is the action of drugs and of the other outward influences upon the... | |
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