The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art by Edward Berdoe
1. Medicine is of all the arts the most noble; but owing to the
ignorance of those who practise it, and of those who, inconsiderately,
form a judgment of them, it is at present far behind all the other
arts. Their mistake appears to me to arise principally from this, that
in the cities there is no punishment connected with the practice of
medicine (and with it alone) except disgrace, and that does not hurt
those who are familiar with it. Such persons are like the figures[397]
which are introduced in tragedies, for as they have the shape, and
dress, and personal appearance of an actor, but are not actors, so also
physicians are many in title but very few in quality.
Chapters
- Chapter 1 Ch.1
- BOOK I. Ch.2
- BOOK II. Ch.3
- BOOK III. Ch.4
- BOOK IV. Ch.5
- BOOK V. Ch.6
- BOOK VI. Ch.7
- BOOK I. Ch.8
- CHAPTER I. Ch.9
- CHAPTER II. Ch.10
- CHAPTER III. Ch.11
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.12
- CHAPTER V. Ch.13
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.14
- CHAPTER VII. Ch.15
- CHAPTER VIII. Ch.16
- BOOK II. Ch.17
- CHAPTER I. Ch.18
- CHAPTER II. Ch.19
- 5. _Disease of the liver_. 6. _Hypochondria_. 7. _Hysteria_. 8. Ch.20
- 12. _Fevers_ in general (Matt. viii. 14, etc.). 13. _Pestilence_ Ch.21
- 23. _Cancer_ (2 Tim. ii. 17). 24. _Worms_; may have been phthiriasis Ch.22
- 28. _Lethargy_ (Gen. ii. 21; 1 Sam. xxvi. 12). 29. _Paralysis_, palsy Ch.23
- CHAPTER III. Ch.24
- 29. For the spell the invocation of heaven may he repeat the invocation Ch.25
- 38. the evil invocation, the finger pointing, the marking, the cursing, Ch.26
- 48. the evil invocation, the finger pointing, the marking, the cursing, Ch.27
- 58. the evil invocation, the finger pointing, the marking, the cursing, Ch.28
- 68. the evil invocation, the finger pointing, the marking, the cursing, Ch.29
- 78. the evil invocation, the finger pointing, the marking, the cursing, Ch.30
- 88. the evil invocation, the finger pointing, the marking, the cursing, Ch.31
- 92. may it drive out the spell and I shall be free. Ch.32
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.33
- 6. The Vedānta, by Bādarāyana or Vyāsa. Ch.34
- CHAPTER V. Ch.35
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.36
- BOOK III. Ch.37
- CHAPTER I. Ch.38
- CHAPTER II. Ch.39
- 1. Medicine is of all the arts the most noble; but owing to the Ch.40
- 2. Whoever is to acquire a competent knowledge of medicine, ought Ch.41
- 3. Instruction in medicine is like the culture of the productions of Ch.42
- 4. Having brought all these requisites to the study of medicine, and Ch.43
- 5. Those things which are sacred are to be imparted only to sacred Ch.44
- CHAPTER III. Ch.45
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.46
- 17. Celsus, _De Medicina Libri Octo_, of which the fifth treats of Ch.47
- 22. Marcellus Empiricus, _De Medicamentis Empiricis, Physicis, ac Ch.48
- CHAPTER V. Ch.49
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.50
- 2. The _Magical_, with extraordinary figures, superstitious words, Ch.51
- BOOK IV. Ch.52
- CHAPTER I. Ch.53
- 900. The sources of the information he ascribes to Oxa, Dun, and Ch.54
- 2. He is to have his land free: his horse in attendance: and his linen Ch.55
- 3. His seat in the hall within the palace is at the base of the pillar Ch.56
- 5. His protection is, from the time the king shall command him to visit Ch.57
- 6. He is to administer medicine gratuitously to all within the palace, Ch.58
- 7. The mediciner is to have, when he shall apply a tent, twenty-four Ch.59
- 14. The mediciner is to take an indemnification from the kindred of the Ch.60
- 18. His worth is six score and six kine, to be augmented.” Ch.61
- CHAPTER II. Ch.62
- CHAPTER III. Ch.63
- 529. The religious houses of this order, of which Monte Cassino was the Ch.64
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.65
- CHAPTER V. Ch.66
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.67
- CHAPTER VII. Ch.68
- 1325. Though he had a penetrating faculty of observation, he was not Ch.69
- CHAPTER VIII. Ch.70
- CHAPTER IX. Ch.71
- BOOK V. Ch.72
- CHAPTER I. Ch.73
- 1518. The king was moved to this by the example of similar institutions Ch.74
- CHAPTER II. Ch.75
- CHAPTER III. Ch.76
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.77
- CHAPTER V. Ch.78
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.79
- CHAPTER VII. Ch.80
- 1774. The greatest teacher of surgery in Germany, A. G. Richter, gave Ch.81
- 1734. He was the author of several medical treatises, one of which Ch.82
- BOOK VI. Ch.83
- CHAPTER I. Ch.84
- CHAPTER II. Ch.85
- CHAPTER III. Ch.86
- introduction of wholly new and startling ideas. Ch.87
- 1608. BICHLORIDE OF MERCURY, or CORROSIVE SUBLIMATE, is the _ruskapoor_ Ch.88
- 337. Boniveh, _Tasmanians_, pp. 183, 195. Ch.89