MPIWG

In the largely humoral model of medicine predominant in the early modern period, disease causation was very different to what it is today. There was no germ theory; the causes of ill-health were usually described in relation to an individual’s humoral balance, although a very small set of diseases, such as the so-called French pox and the plague were seen as contagious.

A collection of chronical diseases, viz. the colick: the bilious colick: hysterick diseases: the gout…

Pechey, John
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An account of the nature, causes, symptoms and cure of the distempers that are incident…

Cockburn, William
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The secrets of the famous Lazarus Riverius, councellor & physician to the French king, and professor…

Rivière, Lazare
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A physical treatise, grounded, not upon tradition, nor phancy, but experience, consisting of three parts…

Russel, William
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A philosophical account of this hard frost. From whence is rationally concluded what effects it…

Peter, John
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Enquiries into human nature, in VI. anatomic prælections in the New Theatre of the Royal…

Charleton, Walter
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Enchiridion medicum: or A manual of physick. Being a compendium of the whole art, in…

Johnson, Robert
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Dr. Willis’s practice of physick, being the whole works of that renowned and famous physician…

Willis, Thomas
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The doctors physician: or, Dialogues concerning health· Translated out of the original French…

Frémont d’Ablancourt, Nicolas
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The art of curing diseases by expectation: with remarks on a supposed great case of…

Harvey, Gideon
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