... be readily susceptible of cure under every variety of treatment and under no treatment at all ; but even all the severer and more dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the... Homoeopathy and Its Principles Explained - Pagina 149door John Epps - 1850 - 320 pagina’sVolledige weergave - Over dit boek
| 596 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature...results there set forth would have been considered satisfactory if they had occurred in his own practice. The amount of deaths in the fevers and eruptive... | |
| Sir John Forbes - 1846 - 72 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases. And such is the nature of the premises, that there can hardly be any mistake as to the justness of... | |
| 1846 - 526 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases. And such is the nature of the premises, that there can hardly be any mistake as to the justness of... | |
| William Henderson - 1846 - 144 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases. And such is the nature of the premises, that there can hardly be any mistake as to the justness of... | |
| 1846 - 576 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature in bringing them to a favorable and speedy termination, but demanding the employment of prompt and strong measures to prevent... | |
| 1846 - 598 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature in bringing them to a favorable and speedy termination, but demanding the employment of prompt and strong measures to prevent... | |
| British Homoeopathic Association - 1849 - 284 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases, which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases." * By Dr. Combe it was observed : — " Let us scout quacks and pretenders as we may, Homoeopathy presents... | |
| John Rutherfurd Russell - 1852 - 456 pagina’s
...dangerous diseases which most physicians, of whatever school, have been accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to assist nature...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases." The late Dr Andrew Combe, whose reputation as a medical philosopher is so widely diffused, is another... | |
| William Henry Holcombe - 1852 - 344 pagina’s
...accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to bring them to a speedy and favorable termination, but demanding the employment of prompt...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases. And such is the nature of the premises, that there can hardly be any mistake as to the justness of... | |
| William Henry Holcombe - 1852 - 316 pagina’s
...accustomed to consider as not only needing the interposition of art to bring them to a speedy and favorable termination, but demanding the employment of prompt...fatal issue in a considerable proportion of cases . And such is the nature of the premises, that there can hardly be any mistake as to the justness of... | |
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