Posts Tagged ‘from’

Medicine after the Holocaust: From the Master Race to the Human Genome and Beyond

February 14th, 2010

Medicine after the Holocaust: From the Master Race to the Human Genome and Beyond

Review

“A timely and important tribute to all the human guinea pigs, and a stirring lesson to the conscience of the world to never use a person in experiments without informed consent. “–Eva Mozes Kor, Survivor of the deadly experiments of Josef Mengele, the “Angel of Death”“Medicine After The Holocaust is a book brimming with wisdom. It stretches your mind – with an infinite array of tangible examples and superbly reasoned arguments – as it stretches your heart. Whether you are a physician or not, you read this book and you want to be a better person. ”–Rabbi Joseph Telushkin, Author of Jewish Literacy and A Code of Jewish Ethics: two volumes, You Shall Be Holy and Love Your Neighbor as Yourself”This book offers important insights into the enduring question: how were doctors and medical personnel who were trained to heal and save lives able to become such an integral part of the murder process in Nazi Germany.  The prominent physicians and scientists who con
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The Soul of Medicine: Tales from the Bedside

January 15th, 2010

The Soul of Medicine: Tales from the Bedside

From Publishers Weekly

National Book Award–winner Nuland (How We Die) turns over his latest collection to the stories of more than a dozen specialists describing their most memorable patients. What is extraordinary about Nuland’s compilation is not the medical heroics but the instances of fallibility and vulnerability that prove the doctor is not just human but caring. A bronchoscopist tells of a famed thoracic surgeon who botches a procedure to recover a small cap a child has swallowed Well, chappies, he chirped, here’s my chance to demonstrate the procedure again. Rather like a double feature at the cinema, yes? When that, too, fails, the frustrated surgeon must do major surgery to rectify what should have been a 10-minute fix. Even the scoundrel who gets a nurse fired rather than be caught in his own impropriety shows a recognizable humanity in his hilarious retelling of barging into a procedure unwashed and unwanted, and being chased from the premises by a mad-as-
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Law Lit: From Atticus Finch to The Practice

January 12th, 2010

Law Lit: From Atticus Finch to The Practice

Review

Why has it taken till 2007 for such a sampling to appear?

The fiction and poetry that every literate lawyer will want to know and every armchair attorney will devour. “The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers. “—William ShakespeareFyodor Dostoevsky, Ayn Rand, Martin Luther King Jr. , and Johnny Cash have all written it. Joseph K. , Hurricane Carter, Portia, and Bigger Thomas have starred in the most timeless examples of the genre. And now, law school professor and noted novelist Thane Rosenbaum has collected the crusaders and casualties of the law, both real and imagined, in one handsome volume of “law lit. “Some of the finest writers in the world have been tantalized by the law and the nature of judgment, justice, and revenge. With dozens of selections, including prose, poetry, essays, and even TV and film scripts, Law Lit is a dazzling collection that transcends place and time, from ancient Greece to foggy London to the narrow streets of
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Economics and the Law, Second Edition: From Posner to Postmodernism and Beyond

January 10th, 2010

Economics and the Law, Second Edition: From Posner to Postmodernism and Beyond

Review

The authors’ primary goal, which they achieve admirably, is to provide a concise review of the major scholarly traditions that use economic analysis of the law. . . . [T]he descriptions of each tradition are clear and painstakingly evenhanded. . . . This brief volume provides a sound understanding of each tradition’s virtues and weaknesses. — Review
–This text refers to an alternate

Paperback
edition.

Review

[This book] provides an excellent introduction to the broad contours of Law and Economics. . . . It can be especially recommended to readers interested in short but very informative overviews on different aspects of this discipline. (Hans-Bernd Schafer Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics )’You can’t tell the players without a scorecard,’ or so vendors at a baseball game say, and the Mercuro and Medema book under review provides team scorecards and much more: intellectual histories and outlines of the dominant styles of p
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Teaching Law by Design: Engaging Students from the Syllabus to the Final Exam

December 27th, 2009

Teaching Law by Design: Engaging Students from the Syllabus to the Final Exam

Professors Michael Hunter Schwartz, Sophie Sparrow and Gerry Hess, three leaders in the teaching and learning movement in legal education, have collaborated to offer a new book designed to synthesize the latest research on teaching and learning for new and experienced law teachers.   The book begins with basic principles of teaching and learning theory, provides insights into how law students experience traditional law teaching, and then guides law teachers through the entire process of teaching a course. The topics addressed include: how to plan a course; how to design a syllabus and select a text; how to plan individual class sessions; how to engage and motivate students, even those tough-to-crack second- and third-year students; how to use a wide variety of teaching techniques; how to evaluate student learning, both for the purposes of assigning grades and of improving student learning; and how to be a lifelong learner as a teacher.

About the Author

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A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix

December 19th, 2009

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates' Four Humours to Crick and Watson's Double Helix

The foundations for the scientific study of the body and modern Western medicine as we know it started with William Harvey’s discovery of the circulatory system in the early 17th century. But its roots stretch back as far as ancient Greece, when medicine first departed from the divine and the mystical and moved toward observation and logic. Its early development was slow, constrained by the taboo around dissection (only external symptoms could be used for diagnosis), as well as superstition and mysticism (illness was the work of demons and pixies and curable only by penitence). Paul Strathern steers us skillfully through the maze of discoveries, diseases, and wrong turns that have made medicine what it is today—super efficient, high tech, and increasingly costly. A Brief History of Medicine offers an accessible history of the arguments, missteps, and dumb luck that led to the world’s most important medical breakthroughs—from anatomy, grave robbing, the plague, and
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A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix

December 18th, 2009

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates' Four Humours to Crick and Watson's Double Helix

The foundations for the scientific study of the body and modern Western medicine as we know it started with William Harvey’s discovery of the circulatory system in the early 17th century. But its roots stretch back as far as ancient Greece, when medicine first departed from the divine and the mystical and moved toward observation and logic. Its early development was slow, constrained by the taboo around dissection (only external symptoms could be used for diagnosis), as well as superstition and mysticism (illness was the work of demons and pixies and curable only by penitence). Paul Strathern steers us skillfully through the maze of discoveries, diseases, and wrong turns that have made medicine what it is today—super efficient, high tech, and increasingly costly. A Brief History of Medicine offers an accessible history of the arguments, missteps, and dumb luck that led to the world’s most important medical breakthroughs—from anatomy, grave robbing, the plague, and
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A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix

December 17th, 2009

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates' Four Humours to Crick and Watson's Double Helix

The foundations for the scientific study of the body and modern Western medicine as we know it started with William Harvey’s discovery of the circulatory system in the early 17th century. But its roots stretch back as far as ancient Greece, when medicine first departed from the divine and the mystical and moved toward observation and logic. Its early development was slow, constrained by the taboo around dissection (only external symptoms could be used for diagnosis), as well as superstition and mysticism (illness was the work of demons and pixies and curable only by penitence). Paul Strathern steers us skillfully through the maze of discoveries, diseases, and wrong turns that have made medicine what it is today—super efficient, high tech, and increasingly costly. A Brief History of Medicine offers an accessible history of the arguments, missteps, and dumb luck that led to the world’s most important medical breakthroughs—from anatomy, grave robbing, the plague, and
More A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix from Amazon.com »

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix

December 17th, 2009

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates' Four Humours to Crick and Watson's Double Helix

The foundations for the scientific study of the body and modern Western medicine as we know it started with William Harvey’s discovery of the circulatory system in the early 17th century. But its roots stretch back as far as ancient Greece, when medicine first departed from the divine and the mystical and moved toward observation and logic. Its early development was slow, constrained by the taboo around dissection (only external symptoms could be used for diagnosis), as well as superstition and mysticism (illness was the work of demons and pixies and curable only by penitence). Paul Strathern steers us skillfully through the maze of discoveries, diseases, and wrong turns that have made medicine what it is today—super efficient, high tech, and increasingly costly. A Brief History of Medicine offers an accessible history of the arguments, missteps, and dumb luck that led to the world’s most important medical breakthroughs—from anatomy, grave robbing, the plague, and
More A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix from Amazon.com »

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix

December 17th, 2009

A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates' Four Humours to Crick and Watson's Double Helix

The foundations for the scientific study of the body and modern Western medicine as we know it started with William Harvey’s discovery of the circulatory system in the early 17th century. But its roots stretch back as far as ancient Greece, when medicine first departed from the divine and the mystical and moved toward observation and logic. Its early development was slow, constrained by the taboo around dissection (only external symptoms could be used for diagnosis), as well as superstition and mysticism (illness was the work of demons and pixies and curable only by penitence). Paul Strathern steers us skillfully through the maze of discoveries, diseases, and wrong turns that have made medicine what it is today—super efficient, high tech, and increasingly costly. A Brief History of Medicine offers an accessible history of the arguments, missteps, and dumb luck that led to the world’s most important medical breakthroughs—from anatomy, grave robbing, the plague, and
More A Brief History of Medicine: From Hippocrates’ Four Humours to Crick and Watson’s Double Helix from Amazon.com »