The Principles and Practice of Medicine : Designed for the Use of Practitioners and Students of Medicine
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The Principles and Practice of Medicine : Designed for the Use of Practitioners and Students of Medicine
Sir William Osler
Sequitur Press, 2014
Hardcover.
Bound by hand in fine
leather with silk ribbon. Gilt stamping to spine. A gorgeous book. Printed in America. Made
by hand in in the United States of America.
xvi, [2], 1079, [7], 8 p. :
illustrations. (4 colored.) ; 24 cm. Fine binding and cover. Hardcover.
Reprint of D. Appleton and Company, 1892, "2nd issue with Gorgias". Full
facsimile of the original edition. Extra care and expense has been made
to ensure a superior book.
Sir William Osler was a
Canadian doctor and one of the four founding professors of Johns
Hopkins Hospital. The Principles and Practice of Medicine was Osler's
most famous work. "The timing of the textbook was almost perfect.
Principles and Practice was at once a monument to the achievements of
nineteenth-century scientific medicine and a gateway to the twentieth
century. Osler had mastered the mainstream clinicopathological tradition
of the past seventy years. He was thoroughly up on the bacteriological
work of the 1880s that had solved such a central conundrum in the
etiology of infectious disease. With a few exceptions, his accounts of
the natural history of disease still make sense, in some instances are
considered classic. In 1892 the endocrine system had not been
understood, the body's immune system was still a mystery, viruses could
not be identified, principles of nutrition and genetics were largely
unknown, and x-rays, electrocardiographs, and scores of other diagnostic
devices had not yet been developed" (Bliss, William Osler: A Life in
Medicine). Garrison and Morton 2231; Haskell Norman, Grolier Medical 82.