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A Practice of Thoracic Surgery

JAMA. 1959;170(13):1614-1615. doi:10.1001/jama.1959.03010130118045.
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ABSTRACT

The beauty of science is that it is rarely static and never complete. The fault inherent in all textbooks is that they present the subject as it was a year or more before the date of publication. This does not mean that textbooks are not necessary. For the student and for the busy practitioner they provide a compact body of knowledge which, if the particular science is not progressing too rapidly, will give them a basic understanding of the subject and serve as a basis for their reading in the current literature. The ideal textbook avoids this fault and fulfills its purpose by presenting each subject historically, showing how and why it has evolved, and by so doing emphasizing the fact that it is still evolving; its great virtue lies in its complete bibliography and in the skill with which a body of literaturen has been digested and condensed. This

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