| Sir Benjamin Brodie - 1865 - 244 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other, and to him more interesting pursuits,...patient attention without which no one can be a great physician, any more than he can be a great surgeon, or a great lawyer, or a great statesman. The students... | |
| sir Benjamin Collins Brodie (1st bart.) - 1865 - 240 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other, and to him more interesting pursuits,...patient attention without which no one can be a great physician, any more than he can be a great surgeon, or a great lawyer, or a great statesman. The students... | |
| Sir Benjamin Brodie - 1865 - 238 pages
...more than he can be a great surgeon, or a great lawyer, or a great statesman. The students at th.3 hospital complained that they learned nothing from...discern that he kept any written notes of cases, and I doubt whether he ever thought of his cases in the hospital after he had left the wards. His medical... | |
| Sir Benjamin Brodie - 1865 - 240 pages
...that constant and patient attention without which no one can be a great physician, any more than he can be a great surgeon, or a great lawyer, or a great statesman. The students at tha hospital complained that they learned nothing from him. I never could discern that he kept any... | |
| Sir Benjamin Brodie, Charles Hawkins - 1865 - 770 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other, and to him more interesting pursuits, that he never bestowed < n it that constant and patient attention without which no one can be a great physician, any more... | |
| Sir Benjamin Brodie - 1865 - 734 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other, and to him more interesting pursuits, that he never bestowed . n it that constant and patient attention without which no one can be a great physician, any more... | |
| 1865 - 592 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted I'or the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other, and to him more interesting, pursuits,...discern that he kept any written notes of cases, and I doubt whether he ever thought of his cases in the hospital after he had left the wards. His medical... | |
| William Munk, Royal College of Physicians of London - 1878 - 460 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other and, to him, more interesting pursuits,...patient attention without which no one can be a great physician."* Dr. Young was deeply read in the literature of his profession, as his two medical works,... | |
| Royal College of Physicians of London, William Munk - 1878 - 436 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other and, to him, more interesting pursuits,...patient attention without which no one can be a great physician."* Dr. Young was deeply read in the literature of his profession, as his two medical works,... | |
| Alexander Wood - 1983 - 392 pages
...more exact sciences, was not fitted for the profession which he had chosen, or that it was so much engrossed by other, and to him more interesting pursuits,...patient attention without which no one can be a great physician or a great statesman. The students at the hospital complained that they learned nothing from... | |
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