| Egidio Forcellini - Latin language - 1854 - 1240 pages
...guided is all that can be here attempted. He did not depend solely upon experience, like the Empiric!, nor on mere theory, but endeavoured judiciously to...that which is contrary to the disease itself; and 'J. That nature is to be preserved by that which has relation with nature. From these two maxims arise... | |
| Homeopathy - 1859 - 472 pages
...which he believed to be influenced by the moon, was a favorite with him. He wrote : " Disease is a something contrary to nature, and is to be overcome by that which is contrary to disease itself." His dogmatic system, it is said, united the warring elements into which the profession... | |
| Greek and Roman biography - 1861 - 1246 pages
...guided is all that can be here attempted. He did not depend solely upon experience, like tho Empiric!, nor on mere theory, but endeavoured judiciously to...indications of treatment ; the one taken from the affection contrary to nature, which affection requires to be overcome ; the other from the strength... | |
| John Lord - Rome - 1867 - 608 pages
...a day, and pork as the best of animal food. The great principles of his practice were that disease is to be overcome by that which is contrary to the disease itself, and that nature is to be preserved by that which has relation with nature. As disease cannot be overcome... | |
| Homoeopathic Medical Society of the State of New York - 1884 - 348 pages
...and he espoused the cause of Galen—so unyielding was the servile belief in the ancients. First. " That disease is something contrary to nature, and is to be overcome by that which is contrary to disease itself." (The birth of palliative medicine.) The doctrine of Galen is embraced in two fundamental... | |
| New-Hampshire Medical Society - 1889 - 598 pages
...he based on two fundamental principles, — first, that " disease is something contrary to nature, to be overcome by that which is contrary to the disease itself," and second, that " nature is to be preserved bv that which has relation to nature." Hence arose his two... | |
| 1895 - 858 pages
...which he believed to be influenced by the moon, was a favorite with him. He wrote : " Disease is a something contrary to nature, and is to be overcome by that which is contrary to disease itself." His dogmatic system, it is said, united the warring elements into which the profession... | |
| John Donne - English poetry - 1895 - 314 pages
...Vol. I. Page 10. " Only in this one thing be no Galenist." One of the fundamental maxims of Galen was, that disease is something contrary to nature, and is to be overcome by a remedy contrary to the disease itself. In the next verse, for "court's " read "courts'." Page 1 1... | |
| John Donne - English poetry - 1895 - 342 pages
...Vol. I. Page 10. " Only in this one thing be no Galenist." One of the fundamental maxims of Galen was, that disease is something contrary to nature, and is to be overcome by a remedy contrary to the disease itself. In the next verse, for "court's" read "courts'." Page 11.... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1897 - 814 pages
...necklace, long famous in England. His system of therapeutics is based on two fundamental principles— (1) that disease is something contrary to nature,...nature is to be preserved by that which has relation to nature. Hence arise two general indications of treatment — tlie one taken from the affection contrary... | |
| |