Address of Thos M Logan Md President of the American Medical Association
Address of Thos M Logan Md President of the American Medical Association
Thomas Muldrup Logan
The book Address of Thos M Logan Md President of the American Medical Association was written by author Thomas Muldrup Logan Here you can read free online of Address of Thos M Logan Md President of the American Medical Association book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Address of Thos M Logan Md President of the American Medical Association a good or bad book?
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While for all that is now doing let us have the soul to realize the magnitude of our objects and the import of our aims. Let me ask who that ever attended the annual meetings would not be willing to acknowledge that he did return home a wiser and a better man'/ Who will dare deny that the status *Washin. !_'t(. N L. Atlrc. M. I). |0m- l. V. I. II. -\Vvtli.. , !>. !>. M. D.. Nn. L :m.. Th(-r l. Y (!. (J. Tyrrell, L. R. C. S. I, a K. Mini q. C. L'. L. [ 8 1 of the profession is greatly above what... it was ^wenty- five years ago, when (as quoted by my immediate prede- cessor) the first President declared that " the profession to which we belong, once venerated on account of its antiquity, its varied and profound science, its elegant literature, its polite accomplishments, its virtues, has become corrupt and degenerate, to the forfeiture of its social position, and with it of the homage it formerly received spontaneously and universally. " Would not the impartial observer now, in the face of the sublime record to which I have just adverted, rather, with the fur-seeing wisdom and stirring words of the same gifted Chapman, hail this organization as an instrumentality coming "forward in the majesty of its might to vindicate its rights and redress its wrongs, " and concur with him that, " confiding in our resources, we shall through them maintain the struggle till conducted to victory and triumph?" But, gentlemen, il the estimate I have rendered of what our Association has done be at all true if it has made better physicians ot us and raised the dignity of the profession if it be at all true that the infusion of clear and inductive thinking, and the importation of scientific method and scholastic art, have done so much to advance American medicine towards that exalted station among its cognate sciences, to which it is so justly entitled then so much the weighter are our present responsibilities; so much t;ie louder is the call upon us to sustain our lofty character and position, by increasing the expansive circle of our usefulness, and by extending the range of our scientific resources.
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