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Divine Doctors And Dreadful Distempers How Practicing Medicine Became A Respectable Profession Christi Sumich

  • SKU: BELL-5258118
Divine Doctors And Dreadful Distempers How Practicing Medicine Became A Respectable Profession Christi Sumich
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Divine Doctors And Dreadful Distempers How Practicing Medicine Became A Respectable Profession Christi Sumich instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rodopi
File Extension: PDF
File size: 18.5 MB
Pages: 324
Author: Christi Sumich
ISBN: 9789042036888, 9042036885
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Divine Doctors And Dreadful Distempers How Practicing Medicine Became A Respectable Profession Christi Sumich by Christi Sumich 9789042036888, 9042036885 instant download after payment.

Divine Doctors and Dreadful Distempers examines the discourse of seventeenth-century English physicians to demonstrate that physicians utilized cultural attitudes and beliefs to create medical theory. They meshed moralism with medicine to self-fashion an image of themselves as knowledgeable health experts whose education assured good judgment and sage advice, and whose interest in the health of their patients surpassed the peddling of a single nostrum to everyone. The combination of morality with medicine gave them the support of the influential godly in society because physicians' theories about disease and its prevention supported contemporary concerns that sinfulness was rampant. Particularly disturbing to the godly were sins deemed most threatening to the social order: lasciviousness, ungodliness, and unruliness, all of which were most clearly and threateningly manifested in the urban poor. Physicians' medical theories and suggestions for curbing some of the most feared and destructive diseases in the seventeenth century, most notably plague and syphilis, focused on reforming or incarcerating the sick and sinful poor. Doing so helped propel physicians to an elevated position in the hierarchy of healers competing for patients in seventeenth-century England.

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