18th-Century
Medicine / Discounted Romentic Stroy Books
The
18th century continued to be marked by unsupported theories. The German physician
and chemist Georg Ernst Stahl believed that the soul is the vital principle and
that it controls organic development; in contrast, the German physician Friedrich
Hoffmann considered the body a machine and life a mechanical process. These opposing
theories of the vitalists and the mechanists were influential in 18th-century
medicine. The British physician William Cullen attributed disease to the excess
or deficiency of nervous energy; and the physician John Brown of Edinburgh taught
that disease was caused by weakness or inadequate stimulation of the organism.
According to his theories, known as the Brunonian system, stimulation should be
increased by treatment with irritants and large dosages of drugs. In opposition
to this system, the German physician Samuel Hahnemann developed the system of
homeopathy late in the 18th century, which emphasized small dosages of drugs to
cure disease. Other unusual medical practices developed
toward the end of the 18th century include phrenology, a theory formulated by
the German physician Franz Joseph Gall, who believed that examination of the skull
of an individual would reveal information about mental functions. The theory of
animal magnetism developed by the Austrian physician Franz Mesmer was based on
the existence of a magnetic force having a powerful influence on the human body. Despite
these unorthodox medical practices, the end of the 18th century was marked by
many true medical innovations. British physicians William Smellie and William
Hunter made advances in obstetrics that established this field as a separate branch
of medicine. The British social reformer John Howard furthered humane treatment
for hospital patients and prison inmates throughout Europe. In 1796 British physician
Edward Jenner introduced vaccination to prevent smallpox. His efforts both controlled
this dreaded disease and also established the science of immunization.
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