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Quoting the Hippocratic Oath

Science, 1999
One of the most reiterated and erroneous myths of medical history appears in the review by Julio Licinio of Howard I. Kushner's book A Cursing Brain? The Histories of Tourette Syndrome (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1999) ( Science 's Compass, 1 Oct., p. [56][1]).
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The Hippocratic Oath

Journal of American College Health, 1995
pollo the physician, the sun god, drove the chariot of sun. He was the son of Zeus and Leto and the ,brother of Artemis, goddess of the moon. Apollo’s son was Asclepius, who was taught healing by the centaur Chauron; so skilled in medicine was he that he could restore the dead to life.
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THE HIPPOCRATIC OATH

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939
To the Editor:— I was surprised to read the editorial "A New Interpretation of a Paragraph in the Hippocratic Oath" inThe JournalNovember 4. The "new interpretation" is meaningless and not in accord with the spirit of the rest of the oath. It vitiates one of the most important paragraphs in the entire oath.
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Hippocratic Oath

Although it has been altered to reflect changes in medical knowledge and practice, the Hippocratic Oath is an oath of ethics that has been taken by physicians since ancient times. The authorship of the oath remains disputed, but it is popularly attributed to Hippocrates, a Greek physician who lived around 460 to 370 BCE.
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Hippocratic Oath

Southern Medical Journal, 2004
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