| 1905 - 898 páginas
...the quack doctor who dares to meddle with the infinite complexity of the human organism — pouring drugs, of which he knows little, into a body, of which he knows less. Yet the complexity of a watch is less distantly removed from that of a living body than the latter... | |
| 1905 - 1112 páginas
...the quack doctor who dares to meddle with the infinite complexity of the human organism — pouring drugs, of which he knows little, into a body, of which he knows less. Yet the complexity of a watch is less distantly removed from that of a living body than the latter... | |
| Luke Dennis Broughton - 1898 - 526 páginas
...Liverpool is apparently in-a state fully justifying the old definiof a physician as a ' man who pours drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he ws less.' " During his last illness of something like three weeks, the late Mr. Maybrick took from... | |
| Charles Frederic Aked - 1908 - 270 páginas
...without demur the old-time scoff at the medical profession, that the art of medicine consists of pouring drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less ? Not he ! He may say, " I don't know " ; but he is quick with his assertion, " but I am going to know... | |
| 1901 - 600 páginas
...render the practitioner of the future " less liable to the contemptuous remark, that he is pouring drrgs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less." Is it not just possible that the efficiency, or inefficiency, of these same drugs may depend as much... | |
| Nelson Commins Roberts, Samuel W. Moorhead - 1914 - 444 páginas
...— SKETCHES OF PROMINENT OLD-TIME PHYSICIANS. Voltaire once defined a physician as "A man who crams drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less." That may have been true of a certain class of French empirics at the time it was written, but since... | |
| 1914 - 112 páginas
...the conclusion, to see if the author recommends or condemns the injection of a few million bacteria of which he knows little, into a body of which he knows lese. Morphology and structural evolution now give way to chemistry, chemical evolution and the survival... | |
| John W. Wright, William A. Young - 1915 - 436 páginas
...they had been engaged in practice for years. Voltaire once defined a physician as "A man who crams drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less." Possibly this may have been true of a certain class of French empirics at the time Voltaire wrote,... | |
| 1916 - 696 páginas
...place in society to which he was justly entitled. Voltaire defined a physician as "a man who crams drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less." That may have been true of a certain class of French empirics at the time it was written, but since... | |
| 1917 - 422 páginas
..."by the grace of God." Voltaire, the famous French author, defined a physician as "A man who crams drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less." That may possibly have been true of a certain class of French empirics at the time it was written,... | |
| |