Abstract
W. F. Bynum’s Science and the Practice of Medicine in the Nineteenth Century is an excellent, authoritative account of the rise of modem medicine. Bynum’s thesis is clearly stated: “in terms of concepts, institutions, and professional structures, the medicine of 1900 was closer to us almost a century later than it was to the medicine of 1790. In other words, modem medicine, by which I simply mean ‘our’ medicine, was the product of nineteenth-century society.“’
After surveying medical thought and practice in 1790, Bynum reviews developments in three crucial loci: ...