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Thus We Are Men

JAMA. 1939;112(25):2628. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800250052031.
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ABSTRACT

Among the most erudite and clever of British writers in the field of medicine today is Sir Walter Langdon-Brown, emeritus professor of physic and fellow of the Corpus Christi College in the University of Cambridge. This series of lectures comprises such important addresses as the Maudsley, the Cavendish and the Sir Charles Hastings memorial lecture. There are also the contributions to the Harveian Society, the Abernethian Society and the Osier Club. Every one of the essays is thought provoking and mentally stimulating. There are many quotable paragraphs. For example, "In disease of the body the higher levels which develop last suffer first, for they have not had time to acquire such a firm hold on the instincts of the organism as the lower. In the same way the body politic evolves its higher levels later than the individuals composing it. A committee is always more ready to perpetrate an injustice

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