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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text.
Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original
book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not
illustrated. 1781 edition. Excerpt: ... Such were the varied
mortifications which Julius suffered. By degrees, however, they
produced the most salutary effects upon his mind; correcting his
arrogance, humbling his prjde, and teaching him the art of
self-government. Experience convinced him, that learning is only
respected, when it is rather concealed, than ostentatiously
displayed; that superiority, when assumed, is seldom admitted, and
generally rejected with scorn; and that to make others pleased wish
us, we must endeavour, by attention and proper deference, to render
them satisfied and pleased with themselves. Vanity. Icero left
Sicily, where he had been quaestor, full of the flattering idea,
that he was the subject of general conversation in Italy; and that
he should every where be honoured with marks of the highest
distinction, for the wisdom and integrity which he had displayed in
that arduous Querns office. He happened to pass through Puzzoli, in
the season when crouds of company resorted to the celebrated baths
of that place. Pray what news? said one to him. Is it long since
you came from Rome? I am returning from my province, replied
Cicero, with great surprise. True, observed another, from Africa
No, answered Cicero, with indignation, from Sicily. You surely
know, interposed a third, that he has been quaestor at Syracuse.
This was a farther instance of mortifying ignorance, for his
province lay in a different part of the island: and Cicero, abashed
and disgusted, turned away from the company, to avoid any more
interrogations. Reflection, however, he informs us, converted this
disappointment into a lesson. of instruction; and he derived
advantages from it, which overbalanced the loss of compliment and
admiration. J KNOWLEDGE. About ten years since, Mr..
A physician and medical reformer enthused by the scientific and
cultural progress of the Enlightenment as it took hold in Britain,
Thomas Percival (1740 1804) wrote on many topics, but he was
particularly concerned about public health issues arising from the
factory conditions of the Industrial Revolution. Calling for
improved standards of care, he believed that the working poor
should be treated the same as wealthy private clients. Following a
disastrous dispute in 1792 which closed the Manchester Infirmary's
Fever Hospital during an epidemic, Percival was asked to draft
regulations on professional medical conduct. In 1794 he privately
circulated a tract, Medical Jurisprudence, which he later revised
for this 1803 publication. Based on Hippocratic and Christian
principles, Percival's work is considered the first modern
formulation of doctor-patient etiquette. His Essays Medical and
Experimental (revised edition, 1772 3) and the four volumes of his
collected works (1807) are also reissued in this series."
A physician and medical reformer enthused by the scientific and
cultural progress of the Enlightenment as it took hold in Britain,
Thomas Percival (1740 1804) wrote on many topics, including public
health and demography. His influential Medical Ethics (also
reissued in this series) is considered the first modern
formulation. This one-volume reissue brings together two volumes of
his essays on a variety of medical subjects, published in a revised
second edition of 1772 and a follow-up collection of 1773. Many of
the essays reflect his concern for public health, particularly for
the citizens of Manchester. The appendix to the first volume
includes two essays that were previously unpublished. Several of
the pieces record medical oddities encountered by Percival, and
others document his observations on the possible medicinal
applications of certain plants, including coffee. His four-volume
Works (1807), containing additional essays that appeared after
1773, is also reissued in this series."
A physician and medical reformer enthused by the scientific and
cultural progress of the Enlightenment as it took hold in Britain,
Thomas Percival (1740 1804) wrote on many topics, including public
health and demography. His influential publication on medical
ethics is considered the first modern formulation. In 1807, his son
Edward published this four-volume collection of his father's
diverse work. Some of the items here had never been published
before, including a selection of Percival's private correspondence
and a biographical account written by Edward. Volume 1 contains
this biography and the full text of Percival's popular
self-improvement book, A Father's Instructions, originally intended
for his own children and then published in three parts between 1775
and 1800. His Medical Ethics (1803) and Essays Medical and
Experimental (revised edition, 1772 3) have been reissued
separately in this series."
A physician and medical reformer enthused by the scientific and
cultural progress of the Enlightenment as it took hold in Britain,
Thomas Percival (1740 1804) wrote on many topics, including public
health and demography. His influential publication on medical
ethics is considered the first modern formulation. In 1807, his son
Edward published this four-volume collection of his father's
diverse work. Some of the items here had never been published
before, including a selection of Percival's private correspondence
and a biographical account written by Edward. Volume 2 contains
essays on moral and literary subjects, notably a Socratic discourse
on truth as well as miscellaneous observations on the influence of
habit and association. Also included are a memoir of the
philanthropist Thomas Butterworth Bayley and the text of Percival's
Medical Ethics (1803), which has been reissued separately in this
series along with his Essays Medical and Experimental (revised
edition, 1772 3)."
A physician and medical reformer enthused by the scientific and
cultural progress of the Enlightenment as it took hold in Britain,
Thomas Percival (1740 1804) wrote on many topics, including public
health and demography. His influential publication on medical
ethics is considered the first modern formulation. In 1807, his son
Edward published this four-volume collection of his father's
diverse work. Some of the items here had never been published
before, including a selection of Percival's private correspondence
and a biographical account written by Edward. Volume 3 contains the
first two parts of Essays Medical and Experimental, the revised
edition of which has been reissued separately in this series in one
volume in addition to his Medical Ethics (1803). The essays reflect
Percival's wide range of interests, such as the application of
philosophical methods to medical questions, the importance of
accurate record keeping, and the risks of inoculating very young
children against smallpox."
A physician and medical reformer enthused by the scientific and
cultural progress of the Enlightenment as it took hold in Britain,
Thomas Percival (1740 1804) wrote on many topics, including public
health and demography. His influential Medical Ethics (also
reissued in this series) is considered the first modern
formulation. In 1807, his son Edward published this four-volume
collection of his father's diverse work. Some of the items here had
never been published before, including a selection of Percival's
private correspondence and a biographical account written by
Edward. Volume 4 contains the third and fourth parts of Percival's
Essays Medical and Experimental, which were completed following the
revised edition that is reissued separately in one volume in the
Cambridge Library Collection. The essays reflect Percival's wide
range of interests, such as the regulation of hospitals and
prisons, and the medical abnormalities he sometimes observed in his
patients."
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