| John Vosburgh Stevens - 1900 - 584 sivua
...categories. Rafinesque defines the Eclectics as "those who subject and adopt in practice whatever is found beneficial, and who change their prescriptions according...emergencies, circumstances, and acquired knowledge." The stereotyped plates of the Medical Flora were afterward purchased by Dr. Cooke, and portions of... | |
| 1898 - 856 sivua
...categories. Rafinesque defines the Eclectics as "those who subject and adopt in practice whatever is found beneficial, and who change their prescriptions according...emergencies, circumstances, and acquired knowledge." The stereotyped plates of the Medical Flora were afterward purchased by Dr. Cooke, and portions of... | |
| 1910 - 590 sivua
...medical knowledge. The eclectics are those, he adds, who subject and adopt in practice whatever is found beneficial, and who change their prescriptions according...emergencies, circumstances, and acquired knowledge; white the experimentalists are those who are directed by experience and experiments, observations,... | |
| 1911 - 432 sivua
...medical knowledge. The Eclectics are those, he adds, who subject and adopt in practice whatever is found beneficial, and who change their prescriptions according...emergencies, circumstances and acquired knowledge ; while the Experimentalists are those, who are directed by experience and experiments, observations,... | |
| Matthew Wood - 2000 - 236 sivua
..."eclectic" by the "medical reformers" of Ohio was probably inspired by Rafinesque. He wrote in 1828, "The Eclectics are those who select and adopt in practice...according to emergencies, circumstances and acquired knowledge."8 This is sometimes cited as the first use of the word "eclectic," but the term was already... | |
| Arthur K. Shapiro, Elaine Shapiro - 2000 - 304 sivua
...early nineteenth century, were defined as "those who subject and adopt in practice whatever is found beneficial, and who change their prescriptions according...emergencies, circumstances, and acquired knowledge" (Kremers and Urdang 1940, 161). It used a pharmacological smorgasbord, a combination of drugs that... | |
| Michael A Flannery, Lloyd Library And Museum, Dennis B Worthen - 2001 - 352 sivua
...classification of physicians given in the introduction to the Medical Flora, defined eclectic practitioners as "those who select and adopt in practice, whatever...emergencies, circumstances and acquired knowledge" (see his Medical Flora, Volume 1 [Philadelphia: Samuel C. Atkinson. 1828] p. iv). There is no evidence... | |
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