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        〃UNLEARNED VIEWS OF MEDICINE〃




        _To Dr。 Caspar Wistar_

        _Washington; June 21; 1807_




        DEAR SIR;  I have a grandson; the son of Mr。 Randolph; now

about 15 years of age; in whose education I take a lively interest。

His time has not hitherto been employed to the greatest advantage; a

frequent change of tutors having prevented the steady pursuit of any

one plan。  Whether he possesses that lively imagination; usually

called genius; I have not had opportunities of knowing。  But I think

he has an observing mind & sound judgment。  He is assiduous; orderly;

& of the most amiable temper & dispositions。  As he will be at ease

in point of property; his education is not directed to any particular

possession; but will embrace those sciences which give to retired

life usefulness; ornament or amusement。  I am not a friend to placing

growing men in populous cities; because they acquire there habits &

partialities which do not contribute to the happiness of their after

life。  But there are particular branches of science; which are not so

advantageously taught anywhere else in the U。S。 as in Philadelphia。

The garden at the Woodlands for Botany; Mr。 Peale's Museum for

Natural History; your Medical school for Anatomy; and the able

professors in all of them; give advantages not to be found elsewhere。

We propose; therefore; to send him to Philadelphia to attend the

schools of Botany; Natural History; Anatomy; & perhaps Surgery; but

not of Medicine。  And why not of Medicine; you will ask?  Being led

to the subject; I will avail myself of the occasion to express my

opinions on that science; and the extent of my medical creed。  But;

to finish first with respect to my grandson; I will state the favor I

ask of you; which is the object of this letter。




        Having been born & brought up in a mountainous & healthy

country; we should be unwilling he should go to Philadelphia until

the autumnal diseases cease。  It is important therefore for us to

know; at what period after that; the courses of lectures in Natural

history; Botany; Chemistry; Anatomy & Surgery begin and end; and what

days or hours they occupy?  The object of this is that we may be able

so to marshal his pursuits as to bring their accomplishment within

the shortest space practicable。  I shall write to Doctor Barton for

information as to the courses of natural history & botany but not

having a sufficient acquaintance with professors of chemistry &

surgery; if you can add the information respecting their school to

that of your own; I shall be much obliged to you。  What too are the

usual terms of boarding?  What the compensations to professors?  And

can you give me a conjectural estimate of other necessary expenses?

In these we do not propose to indulge him beyond what is necessary;

decent; & usual; because all beyond that leads to dissipation &

idleness; to which; at present; he has no propensities。  I think Mr。

Peale has not been in the habit of receiving a boarder。  His house &

family would; of themselves; be a school of virtue & instruction; &

hours of leisure there would be as improving as busy ones elsewhere。

But I say this only on the possibility of so desirable a location for

him; and not with the wish that the thought should become known to

Mr。 Peale; unless some former precedent should justify it's

suggestion to him。  I am laying a heavy tax on your busy time; but I

think your goodness will pardon it in consideration of it's bearing

on my happiness。




        This subject dismissed; I may now take up that which it led to;

and further tax your patience with unlearned views of medicine;

which; as in most cases; are; perhaps; the more confident in

proportion as they are less enlightened。




        We know; from what we see & feel; that the animal body in it's

organs and functions is subject to derangement; inducing pain; &

tending to it's destruction。  In this disordered state; we observe

nature providing for the re…establishment of order; by exciting some

salutary evacuation of the morbific matter; or by some other

operation which escapes our imperfect senses and researches。  She

brings on a crisis; by stools; vomiting; sweat; urine; expectoration;

bleeding; &c。; which; for the most part; ends in the restoration of

healthy action。  Experience has taught us; also; that there are

certain substances; by which; applied to the living body; internally

or externally; we can at will produce these same evacuations; and

thus do; in a short time; what nature would do but slowly; and do

effectually; what perhaps she would not have strength to accomplish。

Where; then; we have seen a disease; characterized by specific signs

or phenomena; and relieved by a certain natural evacuation or

process; whenever that disease recurs under the same appearances; we

may reasonably count on producing a solution of it; by the use of

such substances as we have found produce the same evacuation or

movement。  Thus; fulness of the stomach we can relieve by emetics;

diseases of the bowels; by purgatives; inflammatory cases; by

bleeding; intermittents; by the Peruvian bark; syphilis; by mercury:

watchfulness; by opium; &c。  So far; I bow to the utility of

medicine。  It goes to the well…defined forms of disease; & happily;

to those the most frequent。  But the disorders of the animal body; &

the symptoms indicating them; are as various as the elements of which

the body is composed。  The combinations; too; of these symptoms are

so infinitely diversified; that many associations of them appear too

rarely to establish a definite disease; and to an unknown disease;

there cannot be a known remedy。  Here then; the judicious; the moral;

the humane physician should stop。  Having been so often a witness to

the salutary efforts which nature makes to re…establish the

disordered functions; he should rather trust to their action; than

hazard the interruption of that; and a greater derangement of the

system; by conjectural experiments on a machine so complicated & so

unknown as the human body; & a subject so sacred as human life。  Or;

ifthe appearance of doing something be necessary to keep alive the

hope & spirits of the patient; it should be of the most innocent

character。  One of the most successful physicians I have ever known;

has assured me; that he used more bread pills; drops of colored

water; & powders of hickory ashes; than of all other medicines put

together。  It was certainly a pious fraud。  But the adventurous

physician goes on; & substitutes presumption for knolege。  From the

scanty field of what is known; he launches into the boundless region

of what is unknown。  He establishes for his guide some fanciful

theory of corpuscular attraction; of chemical agency; of mechanical

powers; of stimuli; of irritability accumulated or exhausted; of

depletion by the lancet & repletion by mercury; or some other

ingenious dream; which lets him into all nature's secrets at short

hand。  On the principle which he thus assumes; he forms his table of

nosology; arrays his diseases into families; and extends his curative

treatment; by analogy; to all the cases he has thus arbitrarily

marshalled together。  I have lived myself to see the disciples of

Hoffman; Boerhaave; Stalh; Cullen; Brown; succeed one another like

the shifting figures of a magic lantern; & their fancies; like the

dresses of the annual doll…babies from Paris; becoming; from their

novelty; the vogue of the day; and yielding to the next novelty their

ephemeral favor。  The patient; treated on the fashionable theory;

sometimes gets well in spite of the medicine。  The medicine therefore

restored him; & the young doctor receives new courage to proceed in

his bold experiments on the lives of his fellow creatures。  I believe

we may safely affirm; that the inexperienced & presumptuous band of

medical tyros let loose upon the world; destroys more of human life

in one year; than all the Robinhoods; Cartouches; & Macheaths do in a

century。  It is in this part of medicine that I wish to see a reform;

an abandonment of hypothesis for sober facts; the first degree of

value set on clinical observation; and the lowest on visionary

theories。  I would wish the young practitioner; especially; to have

deeply impressed on his mind; the real limits of his art; & that when

the state of his patient gets beyond these; his office is to be a

watchful; but quiet spectator of the operations of nature; giving

them fair play by a well…regulated regimen; & by all the aid they can

derive from the excitement of good spirits & hope in the patient。  I

have no doubt; that some diseases not yet understood may in time be

transferred to the table of those known。  But; were I a physician; I

would rather leave the transfer to the slow hand of accident; than

hasten it by guilty experiments on those who put their lives into my

hands。  The only sure foundations of medicine are; an int

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