Update on Dr. Thomas Butler
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Dr. Butler revisited.
WILLIAM BuTLER, Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge, was famous in his lifetime as a medical eccentric, whose practice could only with difficulty be classified under any school-theory. His papers, preserved in the Fellows' Library at Clare, confirm that he was humane and forthright, not tied to any philosophical system but with ideas pointing towards the testing of remedies by trials and of theo...
متن کاملDr. Butler revisited: appreciation and comments.
aegrum: "Have burdened the sick man." 442, line 6. The right reading is "Impotencye." 442, line 14. The quotation reads: Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum. Grata superveniet quae non sperabitur hora. Believe that every day which has shone on you has been your last. Each hour will then come as a pleasure through being unexpected. The source is Horace Epistles 1.4.14, and is appropriate ad...
متن کاملQ & A with Dr. Stanley Aronson on Butler Hospital’s First Endowed Chair.
Butler Hospital inaugurated its first endowed chair, The Aronson Chair for Neurodegenerative Disorders on April 12 at a celebration held at the Providence Marriott. Pictured from left, Gale Aronson, Dr. Stanley M. Aronson, Butler’s President Patricia Recupero, MD, JD; and the inaugural Chair, Joseph H. Friedman, MD. PROVIDENCE – Following the recent celebration of The Aronson Chair for Neurodeg...
متن کاملDr John Thomas Arlidge and Victorian occupational medicine.
In 1892 Dr John Thomas Arlidge, physician at the North Staffordshire Infirmary, published The hygiene, diseases and mortality of occupations.' This lengthy volumeover 550 pages-was the first significant British publication on occupational diseases since Charles Turner Thackrah's The effects of the principal arts, trades and professions, ... on health and longevity, published in 1831.2 Hygiene m...
متن کاملSome letters of Dr. Thomas Willis (1621-1675).
OCCASIONALLY DOCTORS' letters may be of more interest to medical historians than their published writings. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the elegance of a physician's literary style was often more highly regarded than the astuteness of his clinical observations or the efficacy of his treatment. Medical books tended to be inflated with dubious hypotheses and the few worthwhile reme...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Clinical Infectious Diseases
سال: 2006
ISSN: 1058-4838,1537-6591
DOI: 10.1086/505403