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ARTICLE |

Erratum Extra=Ordinarium.

Oscar H. Allis, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXII(14):777-778. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450410041025.
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ABSTRACT

Philadelphia, Pa., March 27, 1899.

To the Editor:  —In the report furnished you of the regular meeting of the Philadelphia County Medical Society, held March 8, I am reported as saying "that a wrong spirit pervaded this teaching when in so short a time the names of Gross, Pancoast and Agnew were almost forgotten." The discussion was upon the proper method of teaching anatomy, and what I said was that anatomy dealt with the work of the Infinite, was eternal and unchangeable, and will be the same a century hence that it was a century ago—that if the elder Pancoast were to return he could take up the anatomy of hernia or the lecture of to-morrow and no one would notice any staleness or discordance between his teaching and that of the most modern lecturer—but not so in the subject of surgery. Surgery is man's work and is progressive. The

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