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" no body of men are less in concert or seem less influenced by the esprit du corps, than physicians . . . the quarrels of physicians are proverbially frequent and bitter, and their hatred, intensity, and duration seems to exceed that of other men. "
The New-York Monthly Chronicle of Medicine and Surgery - Página 172
1825
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Fees and Fee Bills: Some Economic Aspects of Medical Practice in Nineteenth ...

George Rosen - 1946 - 102 páginas
...body of men are less in concert or seem less influenced by the esprit du corps, than physicians . . . the quarrels of physicians are proverbially frequent and bitter, and their hatred, intensity, and duration seems to exceed that of other men. This state of things is in some degree attributable...
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American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: From Sects to Science

William G. Rothstein - 1992 - 390 páginas
...body of men are less in concert or seem less influenced by the esprit du corps, than physicians. . . . the quarrels of physicians are proverbially frequent and bitter, and their hatred, intensity, and duration seem to exceed that of other men. This state of things is in some degree attributable...
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The Codification of Medical Morality: Historical and Philosophical Studies ...

R.B. Baker - 2007 - 243 páginas
...physicians. .. . The quarrels of physicians are proverbially frequent and hitter, intensity and duration seem to exceed that of other men. This state of things...degree attributable to the nature of the profession ([19], pp. 63-4, originally cited in [17], p. 2). Hobbes himself never penned a more apt description...
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Thoughts Painfully Intense: Hawthorne and the Invalid Author

James N. Mancall - 2002 - 166 páginas
...occurrence" (63). An article in The New York Monthly Chronicle of Medicine and Surgery observed that "the quarrels of physicians are proverbially frequent and bitter, and their hatred, intensity, and duration seem to exceed that of other men" (qtd in Rothstein 64). Stewart blamed these...
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