Wrestling with Nature From Omens to Science

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of the prescientifi c days of the nineteenth century.^81 Still other physicians
lamented the lost art of medicine, stolen by science. And always there were
the commencement speakers and anniversary lecturers regaling audiences
with the inspiring story of medicine’s rise to the pinnacle of science.

NOTES

I want to thank Spencer Fluhman and Paul Erickson for their assistance in tracking
down many of the sources used in this essay.


  1. Dana W. Atchley, “Science and Medical Education,” Journal of the American Medi-
    cal Association 164 (1957): 542.

  2. George Sarton, “The History of Science versus the History of Medicine,” Isis 23
    (1935): 313–20; Henry E. Sigerist, “The History of Medicine and the History of Science:
    An Open Letter to George Sarton, Editor of Isis,” Bulletin of the Institute of the History of
    Medicine 4 (1936): 1–13.

  3. See, e.g., Gerald L. Geison, “Divided We Stand: Physiologists and Clinicians
    in the American Context,” in The Therapeutic Revolution: Essays in the Social History
    of American Medicine, ed. Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (Philadelphia:
    University of Pennsylvania Press, 1979), 67–90; Russell C. Maulitz, “‘Physician versus
    Bacteriologist’: The Ideology of Science in Clinical Medicine,” in The Therapeutic Revolu-
    tion, 91–107; S. E. D. Shortt, “Physicians, Science, and Status: Issues in the Profession-
    alization of Anglo- American Medicine in the Nineteenth Century,” Medical History
    27 (1983): 51–68; Christopher Lawrence, “Incommunicable Knowledge: Science,
    Technology and the Clinical Art in Britain, 1850–1914,” Journal of Contemporary His-
    tory 20 (1985): 503–20; and especially the writings of John Harley Warner: “Science in
    Medicine,” Osiris 2nd ser., 1 (1985): 37–58; The Therapeutic Perspective: Medical Practice,
    Knowledge, and Identity in America, 1820–1885 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
    Press, 1986); “Science, Healing, and the Physician’s Identity: A Problem of Professional
    Character in Nineteenth- Century America,” Clio Medica 22 ([1989?]): 65–88; “Ideals
    of Science and Their Discontents in late Nineteenth- Century American Medicine,” Isis
    82 (1991): 454–78; “The Idea of Science in English Medicine: The ‘Decline of Science’
    and the Rhetoric of Reform, 1815–45,” in British Medicine in an Age of Reform, ed. Roger
    French and Andrew Wear (London: Routledge, 1991), 136–64; “The History of Science
    and the Sciences of Medicine,” Osiris 2nd ser., 10 (1995): 164–93; and Against the Spirit
    of System: The French Impulse in Nineteenth- Century American Medicine (Princeton, NJ:
    Princeton University Press, 1998).

  4. G. E. R. Lloyd, Magic, Reason and Experience: Studies in the Origins and Development
    of Greek Science (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979), 96–97. See also Roy
    Porter and W. F. Bynum, “The Art and Science of Medicine,” in Companion Encyclopedia
    of the History of Medicine, ed. W. F. Bynum and Roy Porter (London: Routledge, 1993),
    1:3–11; and Jacques Jouanna, “The Birth of Western Medical Art,” in Western Medical
    Thought from Antiquity to the Middle Ages, trans. and ed. Mirko D. Grmek and Antony
    Shugaar (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998), 22–71.


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