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Medical Science and Technology
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1981The intimate juxtaposition of science and technology—both often spoken of in the same breath—is currently threatened by those who view technological advances with mistrust. Nuclear fission and genetic engineering provoke almost as much apprehension among scientists as they do among laymen.
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Journal of the American Medical Association, 1957
• Three essential qualities of the ideal physician are that he be a cultivated man, that he be capable of compassionate and perceptive responses, and that, above all, he be a scientist, for it is this quality that distinguishes him from any of the well-veneered and sympathetic practitioners of the healing arts. The primary responsibility of the medical
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• Three essential qualities of the ideal physician are that he be a cultivated man, that he be capable of compassionate and perceptive responses, and that, above all, he be a scientist, for it is this quality that distinguishes him from any of the well-veneered and sympathetic practitioners of the healing arts. The primary responsibility of the medical
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Is Medical Informatics an Art or a Science?
Methods of Information in Medicine, 2006Summary Objective: To give an introduction to the special topic on ‘Medical Informatics: Art or Sciene?‘ in honor of Prof. Dr. Jan Hendrik van Bemmel. Method: Retrospective, personal review on his work. Results and Conclusions: Jan H.
Haux, R. +3 more
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1949
DURING the past two years, a new course has appeared on the curriculum of forty-nine American medical schools. "Medical Military Science" or "Military Medicine" is its title. The Army provides its instructors, and the medical school is its sponsor. The students taking this course will shortly be members of the medical profession.
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DURING the past two years, a new course has appeared on the curriculum of forty-nine American medical schools. "Medical Military Science" or "Military Medicine" is its title. The Army provides its instructors, and the medical school is its sponsor. The students taking this course will shortly be members of the medical profession.
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Medical science and the patient
Journal of Oral Rehabilitation, 1988SummaryClassification is necessary to most forms of thought, and the scientific method requires particular refinement of this process in order to formulate its laws. But there is nothing fundamental about any classification; its categories are chosen for a particular purpose only, and often at least some of the subjects do not fall readily into any ...
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BASIC SCIENCE, SCIENCE, AND MEDICAL EDUCATION
The Lancet, 1976It is generally accepted that medical students should learn those stories from the basic sciences which enable medicine to be rational. But there are several reasons why science as an explanatory activity has much more to offer, particularly if the views of Popper are accepted. Unfortunately an appreciation of the nature of science is only accidentally
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The Relevance of Medical Science to Medical Care
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1970It is a little more than three years since the American Society of Nephrology was organized at the time of the Third International Congress of Nephrology. During that time there have been major changes in the intellectual climate of this country and changes that affect very heavily the medical research and educational community of which we are a part ...
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Eugenics — Medical or Social Science?
Science in Context, 1995The ArgumentEugenics is the paradigmatic case of the conflict between biology and medicine over social influence. Commenting on as essay by Debora Kamrat–Lang(1995), the paper reconstructs the historical roots of eugenics as a form of preventive medicine.
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