The North American Journal of Homeopathy, Band 10

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American Medical Union, 1862

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Seite 328 - ... perfect correspondence would be perfect life. Were there no changes in the environment but such as the organism had adapted changes to meet ; and were it never to fail in the efficiency with which it met them ; there would be eternal existence and universal knowledge.
Seite 151 - First, that the stomach should never be filled to a sense of uneasy repletion. Secondly, that the rate of eating should always be slow enough to allow thorough mastication, and to obviate that uneasiness which follows food hastily swallowed. Thirdly, that there should be no urgent exercise, either of body or mind, immediately after a full meal.
Seite 567 - ... unworthy means. I also engage that I will neither permit nor sanction the use of my name by any other person for such purposes, nor in connexion with any secret or other remedy ; and in case of any doubt relative to the true meaning or application of this engagement, I promise to submit to the judgment of the college.
Seite 566 - Act to grant Qualifications, to impose upon any Candidate offering himself for Examination an Obligation to adopt or refrain from adopting the Practice of any particular Theory of Medicine or Surgery, as a Test or Condition of admitting him to Examination or of granting a Certificate, it shall be lawful for the said Council to represent the same to Her Majesty's...
Seite 545 - ... are diminished before him. Greatness and guilt have too often been allied ; but his fame is whiter than it is brilliant. The destroyers of nations stood abashed at the majesty of his virtues.
Seite 12 - ... disease, and, consequently, that there is a probability that, in their operation on that part (whether it be in a sufficient degree to produce a similar disease or not), they may effect a beneficial change. Oil of Turpentine, for instance, having been known to produce a discharge of bloody urine, might be rationally administered in a case of spontaneous...
Seite 545 - ... submitting to the several exertions made for his recovery rather as a duty, than from any expectation of their efficacy.
Seite 566 - College shall pretend or profess to cure diseases ' by the deception called Homoeopathy or the practice called ' Mesmerism, or by any other form of quackery.' ' It is also hereby ordained that no fellow or licentiate of the College shall consult with, meet, advise, direct or assist any person engaged in such deceptions or practices, or in any system or practice considered derogatory or dishonorable by physicians or surgeons.
Seite 545 - ... doses of emetic tartar, amounting in all to five or six grains, with no other effect than a copious discharge from the bowels. The powers of life seemed now manifestly yielding to the force of the disorder. Blisters were applied to the extremities, together with a cataplasm of bran and vinegar to the throat. Speaking, which was painful from the beginning, now became almost impracticable; respiration grew more and more contracted and imperfect, till half after eleven o'clock on Saturday night,...
Seite 567 - ... to the true meaning or application of this engagement, I promise to submit to the judgment of the College. And I solemnly and sincerely declare, that should I violate any of the conditions specified in this declaration, so long as I shall be either a Licentiate or Fellow of the College, I thereby render myself liable, and shall submit to censure of the College, pecuniary fine (not exceeding £20), or expulsion and surrendering of the diploma, whichever the President and Fellows of the College,...

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