BOYLE, Robert (1627-91). Of the Reconcileableness of Specifick Medicines to the Corpuscular Philosophy. To which is annexed a discourse about the advantages of the use of simple medicines, London: Sam. Smith, 1685, 8°, FIRST EDITION (C4 with clean but severe tears into text), brown cloth. [Fulton 166; Krivatsy 1717; Norman 306; Waller 1391; Wellcome II, p. 224; Wing B4013] Provenance: JCL

Details
BOYLE, Robert (1627-91). Of the Reconcileableness of Specifick Medicines to the Corpuscular Philosophy. To which is annexed a discourse about the advantages of the use of simple medicines, London: Sam. Smith, 1685, 8°, FIRST EDITION (C4 with clean but severe tears into text), brown cloth. [Fulton 166; Krivatsy 1717; Norman 306; Waller 1391; Wellcome II, p. 224; Wing B4013] Provenance: JCL

Lot Essay

Boyle's only formal qualification was that of a "created" Doctor of Medicine from Oxford (8 Sept. 1665), a degree he had not actually read for. Nevertheless, states Fulton, "in this little-studied volume on Specifick Medicines he reveals clinical insight into various disease entities such as nephritis, the failing heart, local gangrene, renal stone, &c." The Advertisement to the work explains how the author had written it while vacationing in a village without access to a library or even to his own book (Usefulness of Experimental Philosophy) published "seventeen or eighteen years before," and he therefore apologises for what repetitions have crept in.

More from University of Chicago Rare Science Duplicates, Pt.2

View All
View All