Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I GENERAL INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE TRIPOS, name and thing
- CHAPTER III THE SOPHS' SCHOOLS before 1765
- CHAPTER IV ACTS AND OPPONENCIES after 1772
- CHAPTER V THE SENATE-HOUSE
- CHAPTER VI THE ADMISSION OF QUESTIONISTS. Huddling
- CHAPTER VII THE MATHEMATICKS
- CHAPTER VIII THE TRIVIAL ARTS
- CHAPTER IX HUMANITY
- CHAPTER X MORALS AND CASUISTRY
- CHAPTER XI LAW
- CHAPTER XII MODERN STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIII ORIENTAL STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIV PHYSICK
- CHAPTER XV ANATOMY
- CHAPTER XVI CHEMISTRY
- CHAPTER XVII GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY
- CHAPTER XVIII BOTANY
- CHAPTER XIX The Degree of M.A.
- CHAPTER XX MUSICK
- CHAPTER XXI ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER XXII CONCLUSION
- APPENDICES
- INDEX
CHAPTER XIV - PHYSICK
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I GENERAL INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE TRIPOS, name and thing
- CHAPTER III THE SOPHS' SCHOOLS before 1765
- CHAPTER IV ACTS AND OPPONENCIES after 1772
- CHAPTER V THE SENATE-HOUSE
- CHAPTER VI THE ADMISSION OF QUESTIONISTS. Huddling
- CHAPTER VII THE MATHEMATICKS
- CHAPTER VIII THE TRIVIAL ARTS
- CHAPTER IX HUMANITY
- CHAPTER X MORALS AND CASUISTRY
- CHAPTER XI LAW
- CHAPTER XII MODERN STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIII ORIENTAL STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIV PHYSICK
- CHAPTER XV ANATOMY
- CHAPTER XVI CHEMISTRY
- CHAPTER XVII GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY
- CHAPTER XVIII BOTANY
- CHAPTER XIX The Degree of M.A.
- CHAPTER XX MUSICK
- CHAPTER XXI ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER XXII CONCLUSION
- APPENDICES
- INDEX
Summary
‘How! you understand surgery,’ answers the doctor, ‘and not read Galen and Hippocrates?’ ‘Sir,’ cries the other ‘I believe there are many surgeons who have never read these authors.’ ‘I believe so too,’ says the doctor, ‘more shame for them; but thanks to my education, I have them by heart, and very seldom go without them both in my pocket.’ ‘They are pretty large books,’ said the gentleman.
H. Fielding's Adventures of Joseph Andrews. 1. xiv.The English universities, while aiming at educating professional men, never pretended in old time to give the final practical training which is required for every profession. Even in the education of the clergy, to which they gave their special attention, they attempted to educate them in scientific Theology rather than to impart even the elements of the pastoral profession.
So it was that young men intending to practise medicine or surgery, though they might receive the grounds of a valuable education, and some theoretical instruction, in one of the universities, were obliged to look elsewhere for practical knowledge to qualify them for their profession.
A Quarterly Reviewer stated in 1827 (p. 235) that of all the physicians then practising in England (three hundred licentiates of the College of Physicians and numerous unlicensed country practitioners) about one hundred had been educated at Oxford or Cambridge; while of the six thousand members of the College of Surgeons not six had graduated at either of our universities.
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- Scholae AcademicaeSome Account of the Studies at the English Universities in the Eighteenth Century, pp. 171 - 181Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1877