[The Evolution of Modern Medicine by William Osler]@TWC D-Link bookThe Evolution of Modern Medicine INTRODUCTION 10/62
It is a glorious chapter in history, in which those who have eyes to see may read the fulfilment of the promise of Eden, that one day man should not only possess the earth, but that he should have dominion over it! I propose to take an aeroplane flight through the centuries, touching only on the tall peaks from which may be had a panoramic view of the epochs through which we pass. ORIGIN OF MEDICINE MEDICINE arose out of the primal sympathy of man with man; out of the desire to help those in sorrow, need and sickness. In the primal sympathy Which having been must ever be; In the soothing thoughts that spring Out of human suffering. The instinct of self-preservation, the longing to relieve a loved one, and above all, the maternal passion--for such it is--gradually softened the hard race of man--tum genus humanum primum mollescere coepit.
In his marvellous sketch of the evolution of man, nothing illustrates more forcibly the prescience of Lucretius than the picture of the growth of sympathy: "When with cries and gestures they taught with broken words that 'tis right for all men to have pity on the weak." I heard the well-known medical historian, the late Dr.Payne, remark that "the basis of medicine is sympathy and the desire to help others, and whatever is done with this end must be called medicine." The first lessons came to primitive man by injuries, accidents, bites of beasts and serpents, perhaps for long ages not appreciated by his childlike mind, but, little by little, such experiences crystallized into useful knowledge.
The experiments of nature made clear to him the relation of cause and effect, but it is not likely, as Pliny suggests, that he picked up his earliest knowledge from the observation of certain practices in animals, as the natural phlebotomy of the plethoric hippopotamus, or the use of emetics from the dog, or the use of enemata from the ibis.
On the other hand, Celsus is probably right in his account of the origin of rational medicine.
"Some of the sick on account of their eagerness took food on the first day, some on account of loathing abstained; and the disease in those who refrained was more relieved.
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