The New England Medical Gazette, Τόμος 5

Εξώφυλλο
Medical Gazette Publishing Company, 1870
 

Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων

Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις

Δημοφιλή αποσπάσματα

Σελίδα 321 - In other things I will take no man's liberty of judgment from him ; neither shall any man take mine from me. I will think no man the worse man, nor the worse Christian, I will love no man the less, for differing in opinion from me. And what measure I mete to others, I expect from them again.
Σελίδα 227 - The strength of this theory consists in the perfect parallelism of the phenomena of contagious disease with those of life. As a planted acorn gives birth to an oak competent to produce a whole crop of acorns, each gifted with the power of reproducing its parent tree; and as thus from a single seedling a whole forest may spring: so, it is...
Σελίδα 533 - ... of the meat, swarm round the vessel, and, urged by a powerful but in this case misleading instinct, lay eggs out of which maggots are immediately hatched upon the gauze. The conclusion, therefore, is unavoidable ; the maggots are not generated by the meat, but the eggs which give rise to them are brought through the air by the flies.
Σελίδα 535 - It is demonstrable that inoculation of the experimental fluid with a drop of liquid known to contain living particles gives rise to the same phenomena as exposure to unpurified air. And it is further certain that these living particles are so minute that the assumption of their suspension in ordinary air presents not the slightest difficulty. On the contrary, considering their lightness and the wide diffusion of the organisms which produce them, it is impossible to conceive that they should not be...
Σελίδα 313 - II qualified to practice, has the right to select his own mode of treatment, and to judge what is best for his patients, and may not be interfered with, unless his results are notoriously bad or he commit some act of unquestionable malpractice.
Σελίδα 538 - And thus mankind will have one more admonition that " the people perish for lack of knowledge "; and that the alleviation of the miseries, and the promotion of the welfare, of men must be sought, by those who will not lose their pains, in that diligent, patient, loving study of all the multitudinous aspects of Nature, the results of which constitute exact knowledge, or Science.
Σελίδα 313 - We are not a body claiming to possess infallibility. It belongs not to us to utter denunciations of what we may believe to be errors of faith and practice: nor to put forth an index of the allowed and the forbidden. We are a voluntary association of laborers; simply from the love of knowledge, as is the case with all workers in science; and we have no power to enforce any restrictions upon which we might determine. We ought not. Not until we have reached the absolute truth should we be justified...
Σελίδα 275 - ... of physic and surgery, (who shall offer themselves for examination, respecting their skill in their profession) and if upon such examination the said candidates shall be found skilled in their profession and fitted for the...
Σελίδα 230 - In all probability the protection of the lungs will be protection of the entire system. For it is exceedingly probable that the germs which lodge in the airpassages, and which, at their leisure, can work their way across the mucous membrane, are those which sow in the body epidemic disease.
Σελίδα 536 - ... of an inch in diameter, which are made visible in the lymph by the microscope. Similar experiments have proved that two of the most destructive of epizootic diseases, sheep-pox and glanders, are also dependent for their existence and their propagation upon extremely small living solid particles, to which the title of microzym.es is applied.

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