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ARTICLE |

THERAPEUTIC PROGRESS

CHARLES WALLIS EDMUNDS, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(7):519-524. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.25420330001001.
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"The knowledge of simple druggs is a study so agreeable and so exalted in its own nature that it has been the pursuit of the finest genius's in all ages." Thus Monsieur Pomet, chief druggist to Louis XIV, opens the preface of his book, "The History of Druggs," which was published in 1694, and "done into English from the originals" in 1725. As he further assures us that even princes have deigned to undertake such an agreeable study, I think that we may profitably spend a short time in considering some phases of the history of materia medica and therapeutics, and especially the changes they underwent during the nineteenth century, together with the factors which have tended to bring about the present conditions. The term "materia medica" is very ancient, having been introduced by Pedarius Dioscorides (40-90 A. D.), the most important writer on pharmacology of antiquity.

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