From the author of How We Die, t**he extraordinary story of the
development of modern medicine, told through the lives of the
physician-scientists who paved the way.
**
How does medical science advance? Popular historians would have us
believe that a few heroic individuals, possessing superhuman talents,
lead an unselfish quest to better the human condition. But as renowned
Yale surgeon and medical historian Sherwin B. Nuland shows in this
brilliant collection of linked life portraits, the theory bears little
resemblance to the truth. Through the centuries, the men and women who
have shaped the world of medicine have been not only very human, but
also very much the products of their own times and places. Presenting
compelling studies of great medical innovators and pioneers, Doctors
gives us a fascinating history of modern medicine. Ranging from the
legendary Father of Medicine, Hippocrates, to Andreas Vesalius, whose
Renaissance masterwork on anatomy offered invaluable new insight into
the human body, to Helen Taussig, founder of pediatric cardiology and
co-inventor of the original "blue baby" operation, here is a volume
filled with the spirit of ideas and the thrill of discovery.