The difficulties and sources of uncertainty which meet us at every stage of such investigations are, in fact, so great and numerous, that those who have had the most extensive opportunities of observation will be the first to acknowledge that our pretended... The Scientific basis of homœpathy - Page xiiiby William Henry Holcombe - 1852 - 304 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Abercrombie - 1832 - 392 pages
...be said to act from experience, but only from analogy. The difficulties and sources of uncertainty which meet us at every stage of such investigations...analogy, and even our analogy too often into conjecture. In a science encumbered with so many difficulties, and encompassed by so many sources of error, it... | |
| John Abercrombie - 1833 - 370 pages
...'•be said to act from experience, but only from analogy. The difficulties and sources of uncertainty which meet us at every stage of such investigations...analogy, and even our analogy too often into conjecture. In a science encumbered with so many difficulties, and encompassed by so many sources of error, it... | |
| 596 pages
...utmost importance to the opinions of such writers as Dr. Abercrombie, who asserts that " those who have the most extensive opportunities of observation will be the first to acknowledge that the pretended experience of medical practitioners must, in general, sink into analogy, and even mere... | |
| John Abercrombie - 1834 - 388 pages
...be said to act from experience, but only from analogy. The difficulties and sources of uncertainty which meet us at every stage of such investigations...analogy, and even our analogy too often into conjecture. In a science encumbered with so many difficulties, and encompassed by so many sources of error, it... | |
| 1834 - 446 pages
...uncertainty which meet us at every stage of such investigations, are in fact so numerous and great, that those who have had the most extensive opportunities of observation, will be first to acknowledge that our pretended experience must, in general, sink into analogy, and even our... | |
| John Abercrombie - 1835 - 512 pages
...of uncertainty, which meet ws at every stage of such investigations, are, in fact, so great and so numerous, that those who have had the most extensive...general, sink into analogy, and even our analogy too off en into conjecture. . „ JT . In a science encumbered with so many difficulties, and encompassed... | |
| 1838 - 860 pages
...is doubtful whether in any case we can properly be said to act upon experience;" and, he concludes "that those who have had the most extensive opportunities...acknowledge that our pretended experience must, in genera), sink into analogy, and even our analogy too oftea into conjecture !" McCullocfi, after telling... | |
| 1849 - 1160 pages
...meet us at every stage of such investigation, are in fact so great and numerous that those who have the most extensive opportunities of observation, will...analogy, and even our analogy too often into conjecture.' CHOLERA MORTALITY. In the following reports copied from the NY Tribune, it appears that the mortality... | |
| 1851 - 862 pages
...meet us at every stage of such investigation, are in fact so great and numerous, that those who have the most extensive opportunities of observation, will...analogy, and even our analogy too often into conjecture." " I am weary of guessing," said an eminent physician, quoted by De Alembert, and he abandoned the practice.... | |
| William Henry Holcombe - 1852 - 316 pages
...the same, and if they differ in any one particular, we can not be said to act from experience, jut from analogy. The difficulties and sources of uncertainties...less fallible than those of the Allopathic school. Thejr practical superiority lies in the more scientific plan of their clinical procedure. They do not... | |
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