Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Body-snatching. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School.
12/72 (page 2)
![of tlie functions of the animal economy ; of their most common and important deviations from a healthy state; of the remedies best adapted to restore them to a sound condition, and of the mode in which they operate, as far as that is known, ought to form a part of every course of liberal education. The profound ignorance of the people on all these subjects is attended with many disadvantages to themselves, and operates unfavourably on the medical character. In consequence of this want of information, persons neither know what are the attainments of the man in whose hands they place their life, nor what they ought to be ; they can neither .form an opinion of the course of education which it is incumbent upon him to follow, nor judge of the success with which he has i^vailed himself of the means of knowledge which have been afforded him. There is one branch of medical education in particular, the foiuidation, in fact, on which the whole saperstructure must be raised, the necessity of which is not commonly understood, bat which requires only to be stated to be perceived. Perhaps it is impossible to name any one subject which it is of more importance that tlie community should understand. It is one in which every man's life is deeply implicated : it is one on which every man's ignorance or information will have some in- fluence. We shall therefore, show the kind of know- ledge which it is indispensable that the physician and the surgeon should possess: we shall illustrate, by a reference to particular cases, the reason why knowledge of this kind cannot be dispensed with : arid we shall explain, by a statement of facts, the. nature and extent of the obstacles which at present oppose the acquisition of this knowledge. We re- ]^eat, there is no subject in which every reader can be so immediately and deeply interested, and we trust that he will give us his calm and unprejudiced attention. . The basis of all medical m(\ surgical knowledge is](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b2104272x_0012.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)