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XII.—Memoir of the Life and Writings of Robert Whytt, M.D., Professor of Medicine in the University of Edinburgh from 1747 to 1766.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
Extract
It does not always happen that the memory of inquirers into nature, who have the merit or the fortune to strike first into a right path, is cherished as it deserves. This remark applies forcibly to the eminent person, whether regarded as a physiologist or as a physician, of whose life aud labours a brief memoir is now laid before the Society. The name of Robert Whytt was familiar to his contemporaries both at home and abroad. Increase of distance should hardly yet have dimmed its lustre. Yet, in proportion as the views which he initiated have expanded more and more in growing to maturity, the less and less is heard of their author. Biography—which never did Whytt great justice—begins already to put him aside. A few particulars of his life, with a catalogue of his works, have hitherto been common in books of that description, principally in those of Germany and France. In some newer French biographies his name has dropped out. But of a late Edinburgh Biographical Dictionary, extending to not a few volumes, while restricted to the lives of eminent Scotsmen, it will hardly obtain credit that an early luminary of the rising University, conspicuous among the European leaders of medical science during a busy period of the eighteenth century, should, amidst a cloud of mediocrity, be there sought for in vain.
- Type
- Transactions
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 23 , Issue 1 , 1862 , pp. 99 - 131
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1862
References
page 103 note * Rutty on Stephens', JoannaMedicine for the Stone, 2d edit., London, 1745.Google Scholar
page 105 note * Black: Lectures on the Elements of Chemistry, by Robison, (1803), vol. ii. p. 53.Google Scholar
page 106 note * Somerville, “My Life and Times,” p. 38C.
page 109 note * Works, pp. 140–160.
page 111 note * Works, p. 150.
page 114 note * Unzer, “Principles of Physiology,” translated by T. Laycock, M.D., pp. 223, 224.
page 114 note † Prochaska, “Dissertation on the Functions of the Nervous System,” translated by T. Laycock, M.D., pp. 407, 408.
page 119 note * Lectures, “Lancet,” 1858, vol. ii. p. 468.
page 121 note * Vol. vi. p. 467.
page 130 note * Works, p. 520.
page 130 note † Ibid. p. 152.
page 130 note ‡ Thomson's “Cullen,” vol. i. p. 19.
page 130 note § Thomson's “Life of Cullen,” i. p. 258.
page 130 note ∥ Thomson's “Life of Cullen, i. p. 258.
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