| 1881 - 816 pages
...exploration when applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? II. In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage, direct... | |
| 1881 - 636 pages
...exploration, when applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? (2) In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage, direct... | |
| 1881 - 632 pages
...exploration, when, applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? (2) In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage, direct... | |
| International congress of medicine - 1881 - 634 pages
...exploration, when, applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? (i) In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage, direct... | |
| George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman - 1881 - 798 pages
...exploration when applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? Second. — In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage,... | |
| 1881 - 806 pages
...exploration when applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? II. In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage, direct... | |
| Christian Fenger - 1912 - 550 pages
...operations as "surgical triumphs or operative audacities, applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases, in which but little of ultimate advantage and, certainly,...peril, may be expected from operative interference." In natural science we have no right to expect anything good or bad without asking nature the right... | |
| Christian Fenger - 1912 - 594 pages
...operations as "surgical triumphs or operative audacities, applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases, in which but little of ultimate advantage and, certainly,...peril, may be expected from operative interference." In natural science we have no right to expect anything good or bad without asking nature the right... | |
| 1881 - 404 pages
...exploration when applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage and certainly...peril may be expected from operative interference? 2. In the discussion of the next great question I would submit that we may with advantage direct our... | |
| 1880 - 484 pages
...exploration when applied to the diagnosis or cure of diseases of other and very dissimilar organs, in which but little of ultimate advantage, and certainly...peril, may be expected from operative interference ? Second. — In the discussion of the next great question, I would submit that we may, with advantage,... | |
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