Wrestling with Nature From Omens to Science

(Romina) #1

224 Numbers



  1. Porter, “Medical Science and Human Science in the Enlightenment,” 57–60. In
    a particularly intriguing exercise, Lester S. King tries to decipher what the term “scien-
    tifi c medicine” meant to Benjamin Rush, who, as far as I know, never used the phrase;
    see King, Transformations in American Medicine: From Benjamin Rush to William Osler
    (Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991), 183; in a chapter devoted
    to “Changing Aspects of Scientifi c Medicine, 1800–1850.” See also King, “Medicine
    Seeks to Be ‘Scientifi c,’” Journal of the American Medical Association 241 (1983): 2469–74.

  2. John Harley Warner and Janet A. Tighe, eds., Major Problems in the History of
    American Medicine and Public Health (Boston: Houghton Miffl in, 2001), 196.

  3. Rudolf Virchow, “Standpoints in Scientifi c Medicine,” trans. L. J. Rather, Bul-
    letin of the History of Medicine 30 (1956): 437–39. In Rudolf Virchow: Doctor, Statesman,
    Anthropologist (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1953) Erwin H. Ackerknecht
    refers to the organization as “the Verein fuer wisenschaftliche Medizin” (Society for Scien-
    tifi c Medicine) (11).

  4. Claude Bernard, An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine, trans.
    Henry Copley Greene (New York: Macmillan, 1927), 2, 205.

  5. E. D. Adrian, “The Scientifi c Approach to Medical Research,” in Lectures on the
    Scientifi c Basis of Medicine, vol. 1: 1951–52 (London: Athlone Press, 1953), 14–15.

  6. N. S. Davis, “An Address on the Nature of the Science and Art of Medicine,
    and Their Relations to the Various Important Interests of the People,” Chicago Medical
    Journal & Examiner 40 (1880): 453–54.

  7. Lord Lister, “The Interdependence of Science and Medicine,” Scientifi c Monthly
    25 (1927): 193–212 (an address given to the British Association for the Advancement
    of Science in 1896).

  8. Philip H. Pye- Smith, “Medicine as a Science and Medicine as an Art,” British
    Medical Journal, August 4, 1900, 281.

  9. Alexander Lambert, “The Adaptation of Pure Science to Medicine,” Journal of
    the American Medical Association 42 (1904): 1669.

  10. Bert Hansen, “America’s First Medical Breakthrough: How Popular Excitement
    about a French Rabies Cure in 1885 Raised New Expectations for Medical Progress,”
    American Historical Review 103 (1998): 373–418; Hansen, “New Images of a New
    Medicine: Visual Evidence for the Widespread Popularity of Therapeutic Discoveries
    in America after 1885,” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 73 (1999): 629–78; see also
    Dan W. Blumhagen, “The Doctor’s White Coat: The Image of the Physician in Modern
    America,” Annals of Internal Medicine 90 (1979): 111–16.

  11. Quoted in Frederic S. Lee, “The Relation of the Medical Sciences to Clinical
    Medicine,” Journal of the American Medical Association 63 (1914): 2087.

  12. Horst Oertel, “Science and Medicine,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 6
    (1916): 207.

  13. “The Scientifi c Physician,” Boston Medical and Surgical Journal 142 (1900): 701–2.

  14. Kenneth L. Ludmerer, Time to Heal: American Medical Education from the Turn of
    the Century to the Era of Managed Care (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 337.


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