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PATHOLOGY AND HISTORY

JAMA. 1909;LII(16):1260-1261. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02540420040007.
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ABSTRACT

Some interesting side-lights are being thrown on history through the growing recognition of the rôle that disease has played in human events. It is easyto understand that, in the past, imperfect knowledge of the nature and causes of disease has obscured the true significance of many serious affections and has led to mistaken conclusions. It would now be well for the historian, reviewing the events of the past, to make use of the knowledge of pathology that has been acquired in the last half-century. If the modern historian, with the aid of the pathology of to-day, does not succeed in changing the face of history, at least he can set the candle of another theory flickering in the haze of uncertainties that enshroud many a venerable historical mystery, and in some instances, perhaps, light the way to a probable solution. It has been suggested, for instance, that the decadence of

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