The physician, worthy of the priesthood to which he has devoted himself, has no right to place on one side his beliefs, even though they be false, that he may experiment upon his patients, and wait with curiosity to see what "expectation" can do for them.


Lectures on Clinical Medicine, Delivered at the Hotel-Dieu (Volume 2), Introduction (p. 16), Lindsay & Blakiston. 1869


The physician, worthy of the priesthood to which he has devoted himself, has no right to place on one side his beliefs, even though they be false,...

The physician, worthy of the priesthood to which he has devoted himself, has no right to place on one side his beliefs, even though they be false,...

The physician, worthy of the priesthood to which he has devoted himself, has no right to place on one side his beliefs, even though they be false,...

The physician, worthy of the priesthood to which he has devoted himself, has no right to place on one side his beliefs, even though they be false,...