| William Cullen - 1805 - 598 หน้า
...accordingly. This plan, however, I cannot adopt, because the operations of nature are very precarious, and not so well understood as to enable us to regulate them properly. It appears to me, that trusting to these operations has often given occasion to a negligent and inert... | |
| William Pulteney Alison - 1844 - 790 หน้า
...; and although it is true, as stated by Cullen, that " the operations of Nature are precarious, and not so well understood, as to enable us to regulate them properly," yet observation of the natural course of these diseases enables us to judge, with considerable precision,... | |
| Alexander Harvey - 1879 - 314 หน้า
...which has its full course, there is an effort of Nature of a salutary tendency." As such he regarded i the state of Febrile Reaction. He looked upon it as...Nature resolve themselves in the main into the Febrile Eeaction, which Cullen regarded as such, and for the rest into the sustaining power of the general... | |
| Harris L. Coulter - 2001 - 822 หน้า
...some medicines of the most powerful nature. '302 "The operations of nature are very precarious, and not so well understood as to enable us to regulate them properly. It appears to me that trusting to these operations has often given occasion to a negligent and inert... | |
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