Contents:
Introduction
Chapter 1: An Uncertain Experience: Learning to Heal in the EnlightenmentChapter 2: Changing Patterns of Medical Study before 1800Chapter 3: Lives of Medical Students and Their Teachers (Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century)Chapter 4: The Clinical Impulse and National Response, 1780-1830Chapter 5: Science and Medical study: Early Nineteenth CenturyChapter 6: A Bird's Eye View of Medical Education in 1830Chapter 7: Toward New Goals for Medical Education, 1830-1850Chapter 8: Between Clinic and Laboratory: Students and Teaching at MidcenturyChapter 9: The Spread of Laboratory Teaching, 1850-1870Chapter 10: The Laboratory Versus the Clinic: The Fight for the Curriculum, 1870-1890Chapter 11: Toward a University Standard of Medical Education, 1890-1920Chapter 12: Changing Student Populations in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth CenturyChapter 13: Consolidation, Stability, and New Upheavals, 1920-1945Chapter 14: A Closing WordBibliographyIndex
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Description
""Becoming a Physician is a highly valuable book, absolutely necessary to anyone who is interested in the history of medicine and history of education... it is a major resource in medical history.""