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Herman Boerhaave

Herman Boerhaave (Dutch: [ˈɦɛrmɑn ˈbuːrˌɦaːvə], 31 December 1668 – 23 September 1738[2]) was a Dutch botanist, chemist, Christian humanist, and physician of European fame. He is regarded as the founder of clinical teaching and of the modern academic hospital and is sometimes referred to as "the father of physiology," along with Venetian physician Santorio Santorio (1561–1636).[by whom?] Boerhaave introduced the quantitative approach into medicine, along with his pupil Albrecht von Haller (1708–1777) and is best known for demonstrating the relation of symptoms to lesions.[citation needed] He was the first to isolate the chemical urea from urine. He was the first physician to put thermometer measurements to clinical practice. His motto was Simplex sigillum veri: 'Simplicity is the sign of the truth'.[citation needed] He is often hailed as the "Dutch Hippocrates".[2]

Herman Boerhaave
Born(1668-12-31)31 December 1668
Died23 September 1738(1738-09-23) (aged 69)
Leiden, Dutch Republic
NationalityDutch
EducationUniversity of Leiden (M.A., 1690)
University of Harderwijk (M.D., 1693)
Known forFounder of clinical teaching
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine
InstitutionsUniversity of Leiden
Theses
  • De distinctione mentis a corpore (On the Difference of the Mind from the Body) (1690)
  • De utilitate explorandorum in aegris excrementorum ut signorum (The Utility of Examining Signs of Disease in the Excrement of the Sick) (1693)
Academic advisorsBurchard de Volder[1]
Notable studentsGerard van Swieten
Author abbrev. (botany)Boerh.

Biography edit

 
Oud Poelgeest Castle, Herman Boerhaave's home in Oegstgeest, near Leiden. This was the site of his outdoor botanical garden that was renowned during his lifetime and rivalled Hortus Cliffortianus, the garden of his friend and sponsor to Linnaeus. He travelled back and forth to his friend's garden and to the Leiden University by trekschuit.

Boerhaave was born at Voorhout near Leiden. The son of a Protestant pastor,[3] in his youth Boerhaave studied for a divinity degree and wanted to become a preacher.[4] After the death of his father, however, he was offered a scholarship and he entered the University of Leiden, where he took his master's degree in philosophy in 1690, with a dissertation titled De distinctione mentis a corpore (On the Difference of the Mind from the Body).[5] There he attacked the doctrines of Epicurus, Thomas Hobbes and Baruch Spinoza. He then turned to the study of medicine. He earned his medical doctorate from the University of Harderwijk (present-day Gelderland) in 1693, with a dissertation titled De utilitate explorandorum in aegris excrementorum ut signorum (The Utility of Examining Signs of Disease in the Excrement of the Sick).

In 1701 he was appointed lecturer on the institutes of medicine at Leiden; in his inaugural discourse, De commendando Hippocratis studio, he recommended to his pupils that great physician as their model. In 1709 he became professor of botany and medicine, and in that capacity he did good service, not only to his own university, but also to botanical science, by his improvements and additions to the botanic garden of Leiden, and by the publication of numerous works descriptive of new species of plants.[6]

On 14 September 1710, Boerhaave married Maria Drolenvaux, the daughter of the rich merchant, Alderman Abraham Drolenvaux. They had four children, of whom one daughter, Maria Joanna, lived to adulthood.[7] In 1722, he began to suffer from an extreme case of gout, recovering the next year.

In 1714, when he was appointed rector of the university, he succeeded Govert Bidloo in the chair of practical medicine, and in this capacity he introduced the modern system of clinical instruction. Four years later he was appointed to the chair of chemistry as well. In 1728 he was elected into the French Academy of Sciences, and two years later into the Royal Society of London. In 1729 declining health obliged him to resign the chairs of chemistry and botany; and he died, after a lingering and painful illness, at Leiden.

Legacy edit

His reputation so increased the fame of the University of Leiden, especially as a school of medicine, that it became popular with visitors from every part of Europe. All the princes of Europe sent him pupils, who found in this skilful professor not only an indefatigable teacher, but an affectionate guardian.[citation needed] When Peter the Great went to Holland in 1716 (he had been in Holland before in 1697 to instruct himself in maritime affairs), he also took lessons from Boerhaave.[citation needed] Voltaire travelled to see him, as did Carl Linnaeus, who became a close friend and named the genus Boerhavia for him. His reputation was not confined to Europe; a Chinese mandarin sent him a letter addressed to "the illustrious Boerhaave, physician in Europe," and it reached him in due course.[citation needed]

 
Bronze statue made by J.Stracke (1817–1891)

The operating theatre of the University of Leiden in which he once worked as an anatomist is now at the centre of a museum named after him; the Boerhaave Museum. Asteroid 8175 Boerhaave is named after Boerhaave. From 1955 to 1961 Boerhaave's image was printed on Dutch 20-guilder banknotes. The Leiden University Medical Centre organises medical trainings called Boerhaave-courses.

He had a prodigious influence on the development of medicine and chemistry in Scotland. British medical schools credit Boerhaave for developing the system of medical education upon which their current institutions are based.[8] Every founding member of the Edinburgh Medical School had studied at Leyden and attended Boerhaave's lectures on chemistry including John Rutherford and Francis Home. Boerhaave's Elementa Chemiae (1732) is recognised as the first text on chemistry.[9]

Boerhaave first described Boerhaave syndrome, which involves tearing of the oesophagus, usually a consequence of vigorous vomiting. Notoriously, in 1724 he described the case of Baron Jan van Wassenaer, a Dutch admiral who died of this condition following a gluttonous feast and subsequent regurgitation.[10] The condition was uniformly fatal prior to modern surgical techniques allowing repair of the oesophagus.

Boerhaave was critical of his Dutch contemporary Baruch Spinoza, attacking him in his 1688 dissertation. At the same time, he admired Isaac Newton and was a devout Christian who often wrote about God in his works.[4] A collection of his religious thoughts on medicine, translated from Latin to English, has been compiled by the Sir Thomas Browne Instituut Leiden under the name Boerhaave's Orations (meaning "Boerhaave's Prayers").[11] Among other things, he considered nature as God's Creation[12] and he used to say that the poor were his best patients because God was their paymaster.[13][14]

Medical contributions edit

Boerhaave devoted himself intensively to the study of the human body. He was strongly influenced by the mechanistic theories of René Descartes, and those of the 17th-century astronomer and mathematician Giovanni Borelli, who described animal movements in terms of mechanical motion. On such premises Boerhaave proposed a hydraulic model of human physiology.[15] His writings refer to simple machines such as levers and pulleys and similar mechanisms, and he saw the bodily organs and members as being assembled from pipe-like structures.[16] The physiology of veins, for example, he compared to the operation of pipes. He asserted the importance of a proper balance of fluid pressure, noting that fluids should be able to move around the body freely, without obstacles. For its well-being the body needed to be self-regulating, so as to maintain a healthy state of equilibrium. Boerhaave's concept of the body as apparatus centred his medical attention on material problems rather than upon ontological or esoteric explanations of illness.[citation needed]

Boerhaave's teaching of his knowledge and philosophy drew many students to the University of Leiden. He emphasised the importance of anatomical research based on practical observation and scientific experiment. His concept of the bodily system took hold throughout Europe, and helped to transform medical education in the European schools. His insights aroused great interest among other critical medical thinkers, not least in Friedrich Hoffmann, who strongly advocated the importance of physico-mechanical principles for the preservation or indeed the restoration of health.[17] As a professor at Leiden, Boerhaave influenced many students. Some in their experiments upheld and furthered his philosophy, while others rejected it and proposed alternative theories of human physiology. He produced a great many textbooks and writings through which the digested brilliance of his lectures at Leiden was circulated widely in Europe. In 1708 his publication of the Institutiones Medicae was issued in over five languages, and went into approximately ten editions. His Elementa Chemia, a world-renowned chemistry textbook, was published in 1732.

The mechanistic concept of the human body departed from the age-old precepts laid down by Galen and Aristotle. In place of a servile dependence upon teachings handed down from antiquity, Boerhaave understood the importance of establishing definitive findings through his own investigation, and by the direct application of his own methods of testing. This new reasoning expanded the field of Renaissance anatomy: it opened the way to reforms of medical practice and understanding in the field of iatrochemistry.

Works edit

 
Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis, 1728
  • Oratio academica qua probatur, bene intellectam a Cicerone et confutatam esse sententiam Epicuri de summo bono (Leiden, 1688)
  • Het Nut der Mechanistische Methode in de Geneeskunde (Leiden, 1703)
  • Institutiones medicae (Leiden, 1708)
  • Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis (Leiden, 1709), on which his pupil and assistant, Gerard van Swieten (1700–1772) published a commentary in 5 vols.
    • Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis (in Latin). Parisiis. apud Guillelmum Cavelier, via Jacobea, sub signo Lilii aurei. 1728.
  • Index plantarum quae in Horto academico Lugduno Batavo reperiuntur (in Latin). Leiden: Cornelis Boutesteyn. 1710.
  • Index alter plantarum quae in horto academico Lugduno-Batavo aluntur (in Latin). Vol. 1. Leiden: Pieter van der Aa (1.). 1720.
    • Index alter plantarum quae in horto academico Lugduno-Batavo aluntur (in Latin). Vol. 2. Leiden: Pieter van der Aa (1.). 1720.
  • Institutiones et Experimenta chemiae (Paris, 1724) (unauthorised). (Digital edition by the University and State Library Düsseldorf)
  • Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni-Batavorum crescunt (in Latin). Roma: Francesco Gonzaga. 1727.
  • Elementa chemiae (in Latin). Vol. 1. Leiden: Severinus, Isaak. 1732.
    • Elements of Chemistry. Vol. 1. London: Pemberton, J and J. 1735. Translated from the original Latin by Timothy Dallowe, MD.
    • Elementa chemiae (in Latin). Vol. 2. Leiden: Severinus, Isaak. 1732.
  • Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni-Batavorum crescunt (in Latin). Vol. 1. Amsterdam. 1738.
    • Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni-Batavorum crescunt (in Latin). Vol. 2. Amsterdam. 1738.

References edit

  1. ^ Gerrit Arie Lindeboom (ed.), Boerhaave and His Time, Brill, 1970, p. 7.
  2. ^ a b Underwood, E. Ashworth. "Boerhaave After Three Hundred Years." The British Medical Journal 4, no. 5634 (1968): 820–25. JSTOR 20395297.
  3. ^ Robert Siegfried (2002). From Elements to Atoms: A History of Chemical Composition, Volume 92, Issues 4–6. American Philosophical Society. p. 128
  4. ^ a b Mendelsohn, p. 287
  5. ^ Herman Boerhaave (1690). "De distinctione mentis a corpore" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  6. ^ Gunn, Mary (1981). Botanical exploration of southern Africa : an illustrated history of early botanical literature on the Cape flora : biographical accounts of the leading plant collectors and their activities in southern Africa from the days of the East India Company until modern times. L. E. W. Codd. Cape Town: Published for the Botanical Research Institute by A.A. Balkema. p. 40. ISBN 0-86961-129-1. OCLC 8591273.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 February 2006. Retrieved 7 February 2006.
  8. ^ Underwood, E. Ashworth (1 January 1968). "Boerhaave After Three Hundred Years". The British Medical Journal. 4 (5634): 820–25. doi:10.1136/bmj.4.5634.820. JSTOR 20395297. PMC 1912963. PMID 4883155.
  9. ^ Clow, Archibald & Nan L. Clow The Chemical Revolution, Batchworth Press, London, 1952.
  10. ^ Boerhaave, H., Atrocis, nec descripti prius, morbii historia: secundum medicae artis leges conscripta (Leiden, the Netherlands: Lugduni Batavorum Boutesteniana, 1724).
  11. ^ Boerhaave, Herman (1983). edited by Elze Kegel-Brinkgreve & Antonie Maria Luyendijk-Elshout. Boerhaaveìs Orations. Volume 4 of Publications of the Sir Thomas Browne Institute Leiden. Brill Archive. ISBN 9004070435, 978-9004070431
  12. ^ Principe, Lawrence (2007). New Narratives in Eighteenth-Century Chemistry: Contributions from the First Francis Bacon Workshop, 21–23 April 2005, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California. Springer, pp. 66–67
  13. ^ H. Biglow, Orville Luther Holley (1817). The American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review, Volume 1. H. Biglow, p. 192
  14. ^ Hosack, David (1824). Essays on various subjects of medical science. New York Symour. p. 113
  15. ^ Cook, Harold (2007). Matters of Exchange. New Haven: Commerce, Medicine, and Science in the Dutch Golden Age. p. 393.
  16. ^ Lindemann, Mary (2013). Medicine and Society in Early Modern Europe (second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–05. ISBN 978-0521425926.
  17. ^ Broman, Thomas (2003). The Medical Sciences. Cambridge: The Cambridge History of Sciences. p. 469.
  18. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Boerh.
  • Guggenheim, K. Y. "Herman Boerhaave on nutrition." The Journal of Nutrition 118, no. 2 (1988): 141-143. doi:10.1093/jn/118.2.141
  • Mendelsohn, Everett (2003). Transformation and Tradition in the Sciences. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521524858
  • Rina Knoeff (2002), "Herman Boerhaave (1668–1783): Calvinist chemist and physician." History of Science and Scholarship in the Netherlands, Volume 3. Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
  • Underwood, E. Ashworth. "Boerhaave After Three Hundred Years." The British Medical Journal 4, no. 5634 (1968): 820–25. JSTOR 20395297

Further reading edit

  • Ducheyne, Steffen (2017) "Different Shades of Newton: Herman Boerhaave on Isaac Newton mathematicus, philosophus, and opto-chemicus", Annals of Science 74(2): 108-125.
  • Powers, John C. (2012). Inventing Chemistry: Herman Boerhaave and the Reform of the Chemical Arts. Chicago, London: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-67760-6.

External links edit

  • "Boerhaave, Hermann" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). 1911.
  • Samuel Johnson's 1739 biography of him online: Life of Herman Boerhaave
  • Museum Boerhaave in Leiden, National Museum of the History of Science and Medicine
  • A recent discussion of Boerhaave's Syndrome in the New England Journal of Medicine (subscription required)
  • Works by Herman Boerhaave at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Herman Boerhaave at Internet Archive
  • Works at Open Library
  • Herman Boerhaave at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • "Aphorismi de Cognoscendis et Curandis Morbis" (1709; “Aphorisms on the Recognition and Treatment of Diseases”)
  • Javed Chaudhry Article about Herman Boerhaave

herman, boerhaave, dutch, ˈɦɛrmɑn, ˈbuːrˌɦaːvə, december, 1668, september, 1738, dutch, botanist, chemist, christian, humanist, physician, european, fame, regarded, founder, clinical, teaching, modern, academic, hospital, sometimes, referred, father, physiolog. Herman Boerhaave Dutch ˈɦɛrmɑn ˈbuːrˌɦaːve 31 December 1668 23 September 1738 2 was a Dutch botanist chemist Christian humanist and physician of European fame He is regarded as the founder of clinical teaching and of the modern academic hospital and is sometimes referred to as the father of physiology along with Venetian physician Santorio Santorio 1561 1636 by whom Boerhaave introduced the quantitative approach into medicine along with his pupil Albrecht von Haller 1708 1777 and is best known for demonstrating the relation of symptoms to lesions citation needed He was the first to isolate the chemical urea from urine He was the first physician to put thermometer measurements to clinical practice His motto was Simplex sigillum veri Simplicity is the sign of the truth citation needed He is often hailed as the Dutch Hippocrates 2 Herman BoerhaaveBorn 1668 12 31 31 December 1668Voorhout Dutch RepublicDied23 September 1738 1738 09 23 aged 69 Leiden Dutch RepublicNationalityDutchEducationUniversity of Leiden M A 1690 University of Harderwijk M D 1693 Known forFounder of clinical teachingScientific careerFieldsMedicineInstitutionsUniversity of LeidenThesesDe distinctione mentis a corpore On the Difference of the Mind from the Body 1690 De utilitate explorandorum in aegris excrementorum ut signorum The Utility of Examining Signs of Disease in the Excrement of the Sick 1693 Academic advisorsBurchard de Volder 1 Notable studentsGerard van SwietenAuthor abbrev botany Boerh Contents 1 Biography 2 Legacy 3 Medical contributions 4 Works 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography edit nbsp Oud Poelgeest Castle Herman Boerhaave s home in Oegstgeest near Leiden This was the site of his outdoor botanical garden that was renowned during his lifetime and rivalled Hortus Cliffortianus the garden of his friend and sponsor to Linnaeus He travelled back and forth to his friend s garden and to the Leiden University by trekschuit Boerhaave was born at Voorhout near Leiden The son of a Protestant pastor 3 in his youth Boerhaave studied for a divinity degree and wanted to become a preacher 4 After the death of his father however he was offered a scholarship and he entered the University of Leiden where he took his master s degree in philosophy in 1690 with a dissertation titled De distinctione mentis a corpore On the Difference of the Mind from the Body 5 There he attacked the doctrines of Epicurus Thomas Hobbes and Baruch Spinoza He then turned to the study of medicine He earned his medical doctorate from the University of Harderwijk present day Gelderland in 1693 with a dissertation titled De utilitate explorandorum in aegris excrementorum ut signorum The Utility of Examining Signs of Disease in the Excrement of the Sick In 1701 he was appointed lecturer on the institutes of medicine at Leiden in his inaugural discourse De commendando Hippocratis studio he recommended to his pupils that great physician as their model In 1709 he became professor of botany and medicine and in that capacity he did good service not only to his own university but also to botanical science by his improvements and additions to the botanic garden of Leiden and by the publication of numerous works descriptive of new species of plants 6 On 14 September 1710 Boerhaave married Maria Drolenvaux the daughter of the rich merchant Alderman Abraham Drolenvaux They had four children of whom one daughter Maria Joanna lived to adulthood 7 In 1722 he began to suffer from an extreme case of gout recovering the next year In 1714 when he was appointed rector of the university he succeeded Govert Bidloo in the chair of practical medicine and in this capacity he introduced the modern system of clinical instruction Four years later he was appointed to the chair of chemistry as well In 1728 he was elected into the French Academy of Sciences and two years later into the Royal Society of London In 1729 declining health obliged him to resign the chairs of chemistry and botany and he died after a lingering and painful illness at Leiden Legacy editHis reputation so increased the fame of the University of Leiden especially as a school of medicine that it became popular with visitors from every part of Europe All the princes of Europe sent him pupils who found in this skilful professor not only an indefatigable teacher but an affectionate guardian citation needed When Peter the Great went to Holland in 1716 he had been in Holland before in 1697 to instruct himself in maritime affairs he also took lessons from Boerhaave citation needed Voltaire travelled to see him as did Carl Linnaeus who became a close friend and named the genus Boerhavia for him His reputation was not confined to Europe a Chinese mandarin sent him a letter addressed to the illustrious Boerhaave physician in Europe and it reached him in due course citation needed nbsp Bronze statue made by J Stracke 1817 1891 The operating theatre of the University of Leiden in which he once worked as an anatomist is now at the centre of a museum named after him the Boerhaave Museum Asteroid 8175 Boerhaave is named after Boerhaave From 1955 to 1961 Boerhaave s image was printed on Dutch 20 guilder banknotes The Leiden University Medical Centre organises medical trainings called Boerhaave courses He had a prodigious influence on the development of medicine and chemistry in Scotland British medical schools credit Boerhaave for developing the system of medical education upon which their current institutions are based 8 Every founding member of the Edinburgh Medical School had studied at Leyden and attended Boerhaave s lectures on chemistry including John Rutherford and Francis Home Boerhaave s Elementa Chemiae 1732 is recognised as the first text on chemistry 9 Boerhaave first described Boerhaave syndrome which involves tearing of the oesophagus usually a consequence of vigorous vomiting Notoriously in 1724 he described the case of Baron Jan van Wassenaer a Dutch admiral who died of this condition following a gluttonous feast and subsequent regurgitation 10 The condition was uniformly fatal prior to modern surgical techniques allowing repair of the oesophagus Boerhaave was critical of his Dutch contemporary Baruch Spinoza attacking him in his 1688 dissertation At the same time he admired Isaac Newton and was a devout Christian who often wrote about God in his works 4 A collection of his religious thoughts on medicine translated from Latin to English has been compiled by the Sir Thomas Browne Instituut Leiden under the name Boerhaave s Orations meaning Boerhaave s Prayers 11 Among other things he considered nature as God s Creation 12 and he used to say that the poor were his best patients because God was their paymaster 13 14 Medical contributions editBoerhaave devoted himself intensively to the study of the human body He was strongly influenced by the mechanistic theories of Rene Descartes and those of the 17th century astronomer and mathematician Giovanni Borelli who described animal movements in terms of mechanical motion On such premises Boerhaave proposed a hydraulic model of human physiology 15 His writings refer to simple machines such as levers and pulleys and similar mechanisms and he saw the bodily organs and members as being assembled from pipe like structures 16 The physiology of veins for example he compared to the operation of pipes He asserted the importance of a proper balance of fluid pressure noting that fluids should be able to move around the body freely without obstacles For its well being the body needed to be self regulating so as to maintain a healthy state of equilibrium Boerhaave s concept of the body as apparatus centred his medical attention on material problems rather than upon ontological or esoteric explanations of illness citation needed Boerhaave s teaching of his knowledge and philosophy drew many students to the University of Leiden He emphasised the importance of anatomical research based on practical observation and scientific experiment His concept of the bodily system took hold throughout Europe and helped to transform medical education in the European schools His insights aroused great interest among other critical medical thinkers not least in Friedrich Hoffmann who strongly advocated the importance of physico mechanical principles for the preservation or indeed the restoration of health 17 As a professor at Leiden Boerhaave influenced many students Some in their experiments upheld and furthered his philosophy while others rejected it and proposed alternative theories of human physiology He produced a great many textbooks and writings through which the digested brilliance of his lectures at Leiden was circulated widely in Europe In 1708 his publication of the Institutiones Medicae was issued in over five languages and went into approximately ten editions His Elementa Chemia a world renowned chemistry textbook was published in 1732 The mechanistic concept of the human body departed from the age old precepts laid down by Galen and Aristotle In place of a servile dependence upon teachings handed down from antiquity Boerhaave understood the importance of establishing definitive findings through his own investigation and by the direct application of his own methods of testing This new reasoning expanded the field of Renaissance anatomy it opened the way to reforms of medical practice and understanding in the field of iatrochemistry Works edit nbsp Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis 1728Oratio academica qua probatur bene intellectam a Cicerone et confutatam esse sententiam Epicuri de summo bono Leiden 1688 Het Nut der Mechanistische Methode in de Geneeskunde Leiden 1703 Institutiones medicae Leiden 1708 Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis Leiden 1709 on which his pupil and assistant Gerard van Swieten 1700 1772 published a commentary in 5 vols Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis in Latin Parisiis apud Guillelmum Cavelier via Jacobea sub signo Lilii aurei 1728 Index plantarum quae in Horto academico Lugduno Batavo reperiuntur in Latin Leiden Cornelis Boutesteyn 1710 Index alter plantarum quae in horto academico Lugduno Batavo aluntur in Latin Vol 1 Leiden Pieter van der Aa 1 1720 Index alter plantarum quae in horto academico Lugduno Batavo aluntur in Latin Vol 2 Leiden Pieter van der Aa 1 1720 Institutiones et Experimenta chemiae Paris 1724 unauthorised Digital edition by the University and State Library Dusseldorf Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni Batavorum crescunt in Latin Roma Francesco Gonzaga 1727 Elementa chemiae in Latin Vol 1 Leiden Severinus Isaak 1732 Elements of Chemistry Vol 1 London Pemberton J and J 1735 Translated from the original Latin by Timothy Dallowe MD Elementa chemiae in Latin Vol 2 Leiden Severinus Isaak 1732 Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni Batavorum crescunt in Latin Vol 1 Amsterdam 1738 Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni Batavorum crescunt in Latin Vol 2 Amsterdam 1738 nbsp Historia plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduni Batavorum crescunt 1727 nbsp Elementa Chemiae 1732 The standard author abbreviation Boerh is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 18 References edit Gerrit Arie Lindeboom ed Boerhaave and His Time Brill 1970 p 7 a b Underwood E Ashworth Boerhaave After Three Hundred Years The British Medical Journal 4 no 5634 1968 820 25 JSTOR 20395297 Robert Siegfried 2002 From Elements to Atoms A History of Chemical Composition Volume 92 Issues 4 6 American Philosophical Society p 128 a b Mendelsohn p 287 Herman Boerhaave 1690 De distinctione mentis a corpore PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Gunn Mary 1981 Botanical exploration of southern Africa an illustrated history of early botanical literature on the Cape flora biographical accounts of the leading plant collectors and their activities in southern Africa from the days of the East India Company until modern times L E W Codd Cape Town Published for the Botanical Research Institute by A A Balkema p 40 ISBN 0 86961 129 1 OCLC 8591273 Herman Boerhaave www whonamedit com Archived from the original on 7 February 2006 Retrieved 7 February 2006 Underwood E Ashworth 1 January 1968 Boerhaave After Three Hundred Years The British Medical Journal 4 5634 820 25 doi 10 1136 bmj 4 5634 820 JSTOR 20395297 PMC 1912963 PMID 4883155 Clow Archibald amp Nan L Clow The Chemical Revolution Batchworth Press London 1952 Boerhaave H Atrocis nec descripti prius morbii historia secundum medicae artis leges conscripta Leiden the Netherlands Lugduni Batavorum Boutesteniana 1724 Boerhaave Herman 1983 edited by Elze Kegel Brinkgreve amp Antonie Maria Luyendijk Elshout Boerhaaveis Orations Volume 4 of Publications of the Sir Thomas Browne Institute Leiden Brill Archive ISBN 9004070435 978 9004070431 Principe Lawrence 2007 New Narratives in Eighteenth Century Chemistry Contributions from the First Francis Bacon Workshop 21 23 April 2005 California Institute of Technology Pasadena California Springer pp 66 67 H Biglow Orville Luther Holley 1817 The American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review Volume 1 H Biglow p 192 Hosack David 1824 Essays on various subjects of medical science New York Symour p 113 Cook Harold 2007 Matters of Exchange New Haven Commerce Medicine and Science in the Dutch Golden Age p 393 Lindemann Mary 2013 Medicine and Society in Early Modern Europe second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 101 05 ISBN 978 0521425926 Broman Thomas 2003 The Medical Sciences Cambridge The Cambridge History of Sciences p 469 International Plant Names Index Boerh Guggenheim K Y Herman Boerhaave on nutrition The Journal of Nutrition 118 no 2 1988 141 143 doi 10 1093 jn 118 2 141 Mendelsohn Everett 2003 Transformation and Tradition in the Sciences Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521524858 Rina Knoeff 2002 Herman Boerhaave 1668 1783 Calvinist chemist and physician History of Science and Scholarship in the Netherlands Volume 3 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Underwood E Ashworth Boerhaave After Three Hundred Years The British Medical Journal 4 no 5634 1968 820 25 JSTOR 20395297Further reading editDucheyne Steffen 2017 Different Shades of Newton Herman Boerhaave on Isaac Newton mathematicus philosophus and opto chemicus Annals of Science 74 2 108 125 Powers John C 2012 Inventing Chemistry Herman Boerhaave and the Reform of the Chemical Arts Chicago London University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 67760 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Herman Boerhaave nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Herman Boerhaave Boerhaave Hermann Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed 1911 Samuel Johnson s 1739 biography of him online Life of Herman Boerhaave Museum Boerhaave in Leiden National Museum of the History of Science and Medicine A recent discussion of Boerhaave s Syndrome in the New England Journal of Medicine subscription required Works by Herman Boerhaave at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Herman Boerhaave at Internet Archive Works at Open Library Herman Boerhaave at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Aphorismi de Cognoscendis et Curandis Morbis 1709 Aphorisms on the Recognition and Treatment of Diseases Elementa Chemiae 1733 Elements of Chemistry A New Method of Chemistry 1741 amp 1753 English Translation of Elementa Chemiae by Peter Shaw Javed Chaudhry Article about Herman Boerhaave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herman Boerhaave amp oldid 1178230630, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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