... part of a greater work on the general subject of the cure of grave forms of disease by the viruses of the disease processes themselves; but here Dr. Koch breaks in with his great epoch-making discovery of a new cure for consumption, and which turns... The Homœopathic World - Página 351891Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| James Compton Burnett - 1894 - 308 páginas
...discovery of a new cure for consumption, and which turns out to be none other than our old homoeopathically administered virus, against which the hue and cry...friend Tuberculinum (which I have ventured to call Bacillinum,as the bacilli were proved to be in my preparation* by an expert in practical bacteriology).... | |
| James Compton Burnett - 1900 - 336 páginas
...discovery of a new cure for consumption, and which turns out to be none other than our old homoeopathically administered virus, against which the hue and cry...difference between our old friend Tuberculinum or Bacillinum and that of Koch lies in the way it is obtained; ours is the virus of *Very kindly made... | |
| John Henry Clarke - 1904 - 164 páginas
...discovery of a new cure for consumption, and which turns out to be none other than our old homceopathically administered virus, against which the hue and cry...difference between our old friend Tuberculinum or Bacillinum and that of Koch lies in the way it is obtained ; ours is the virus of the natural disease... | |
| 1912 - 940 páginas
...therapeutic dose, and then administered. Dr. Burnett, in his "New Cure of Consumption." says: "The difference between our old friend tuberculinum, which I have...as the bacilli were proved to be in my preparation — ' very kindly made for me by Dr. Heath, an expert in bacteriology' — I say the difference between... | |
| Matthew Wood - 2000 - 236 páginas
...discovery of a new cure for consumption, and it turns out to be none other than our old homoeopathically administered virus, against which the hue and cry...lie prone at Dr. Koch's feet in abject adoration." Burnett felt no animosity towards Koch, "the honest worker and distinguished savant," but reserved... | |
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