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  1. Jun 28, 2024 · TV presenter John Stossel was diagnosed with lung cancer back in 2016 and underwent surgery remove it. Stossel thankfully didn’t further treatment for the disease, which he credits his “overanxious wife” for leading to him to detecting it early on, and he returned to work soon.

  2. Apr 25, 2017 · Discussing the importance of the scientific research in history of medicine, John L. Thorthon reveals that “The history of medicine has been studied for centuries, but remains a fluid subject. Fresh facts can reveal new fields of research, and even result in a re-evaluation of the subject.

    • Cristian Bârsu
    • 2017
  3. For most of the twentieth century, academic historians of medicine and of science agreed that the development of scientific concepts in early modern Europe affected medicine, but not the other way around.

    • Harold J. Cook
    • 2011
  4. Nov 2, 2023 · Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain remedies and bloodletting lives on today. This 15th-century medical manuscript shows different...

  5. ALL that seemed necessary, in order to realize the hopes of philosophers, was for medical science to continue steadily along the way of the physical disciplines, and for medical practice to follow closely after. A good start had been made in this direction by the end of the seventeenth century.

  6. This article delineates the integral place of medicine and corporeal thought in the structuring and sustaining of ‘the modernist project’. It is predicated on an understanding of the transcendence of modernity in ‘postmodernity’. It also discusses briefly the place of modernism in medicine.

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  8. Sep 6, 2021 · How medicine became modern. In 19th-century Europe and North America, consumption, as tuberculosis was then known, was the most common cause of death.