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" Consanguineous marriages which bring together persons having a disease or morbid tendency in common are dangerous to the offspring. Not, however, one whit more so than the marriage of any other two persons not related, yet having an equal amount of tendency... "
Cincinnati Medical and Dental Journal - Page 307
1886
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Gaillard's Medical Journal and the American Medical Weekly, Volume 43

Medicine - 1886 - 856 pages
...remaining absent after these marriages proves, for that case at least, that consanguinity was harmless. for it was known to be present. Further, if consanguinity...Quakers. The Quakers are educated to abhor color, so that those who admire color separate themselves from the sect, and thus intensify the tendency in...
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Mississippi Valley Medical Monthly, Volume 6

Medicine - 1886 - 650 pages
...however, one whit more so than the marriage of any other two persons not related yet having an ccjual amount of tendency to disease in common. Conditions...will naturally be propagated by inter-marriage ; eg, color-blindness is remarkably hereditary among the Jews and Quakers. The Quakers are educated to abhor...
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Canada Lancet, Volume 18

Medicine - 1886 - 396 pages
...the marriage of any other two persons not related, yet having an equal amount of tendency to diseases in common. Conditions present in both parents, good...peculiarity in a family, race or sect, this will naturally l>e propagated by intermarriage, e. <j., color-blindness is remarkably hereditary among the Jews and...
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St. Louis Courier of Medicine, Volume 16

1886 - 602 pages
...augmented, and the result would have been the same were they not related. 11. Given a malformatiou or disease firmly established, we have a tendency...Quakers are educated to abhor color. Those who admire colors separate themselves from the sect, and thus intensify the tendency in the remainder. The defect...
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Medical Record, Volume 30

George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman - Medicine - 1886 - 736 pages
...good or bad, are simply augmented, and the result would have been the same were they not related. 1 1. Given, a malformation or disease firmly established,...will naturally be propagated by intermarriage, eg, color-blindness is remarkably hereditary among the Jews and Quakers. The Quakers are educated to abhor...
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Southern California Practitioner, Volume 3

Medicine - 1888 - 536 pages
...parents are simply augmented and the result would have been the same had they not been related. Having a malformation or disease firmly established, we have a tendency to breed true. A defect or peculiarity in a family or race or sect will naturally be propagated by intermarriage....
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New England Medical Monthly and the Prescription, Volume 8

Medicine - 1889 - 606 pages
...marriages. Evil results prove that something was wrong, but that it w.as consanguinity is not proven. Given a malformation or disease firmly established we have a tendency to breed true. The Quakers are educated to abhor color. Those who admire it separate themselves from the sect, and...
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The American Lancet, Volume 12

Leartus Connor - Medicine - 1888 - 526 pages
...simply are simply augmented, and the result would have been the same had they not been related. Having a mal-formation or disease firmly established, we have a tendency to breed true. A defect or peculiarity in a family or race, or sect, will naturally be propagated by intermarriage....
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