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The Works of John Hunter, F.R.S. : With Notes

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - History of Medicine series
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The surgeon and anatomist John Hunter (1728–93) left a famous legacy in the Hunterian Museum of medical specimens now in the Royal College of Surgeons, and in this collection of his writings, edited by James Palmer, with a biography by Drewry Ottley, published between 1835 and 1837.

The first four volumes are of text, and the larger Volume 5 contains plates.

Hunter had begun his career as a demonstrator in the anatomy classes of his brother William, before qualifying as a surgeon.

He regarded surgery as evidence of failure - the mutilation of a patient who could not be cured by other means - and his studies of anatomy and natural history were driven by his belief that it was necessary to understand the normal physiological processes before attempting to cure the abnormal ones.

Volume 2 discusses diseases of the jaw, teeth and gums, at a time when dental surgery was rudimentary.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
110807958X / 9781108079587
Paperback / softback
617.6
26/03/2015
United Kingdom
English
508 pages
22 cm