A. “Déjà Vu” et “Jamais Vu” – (1)
B. “Già Visto” e “Mai Visto” – (2)
C. “Ya Se Ha Visto” y “Nunca Se Ha Visto” – (3)
D. “Already Seen” and “Never Seen” – (4,5)
…”Although co-metacognition would be pretty cool.” — AcademicsSay
References
P.S.
Re: E
Related posts
Re: Putting GlaxoSmithKline to the test over paroxetine | The BMJ (Dec 12, 2014)
A story about oxygen nanobubbles: The End (I think?) | HT WordPress & figshare (March 23, 2015)
Re: Is the pharmaceutical industry like the mafia? | BMJ Blogs (Dec 12, 2014)
Two questions: FDA (US) & INVIMA (Colombia) – #Essure
FDA Research Misconduct — Part II. Further Comments About Dabigatran (Pradaxa)
http://chaoticpharmacology.com/?s=duloxetine
http://chaoticpharmacology.com/?s=quetiapine
Πάπυρος Έντγουιν Σμιθ
Reblogged this on Chaos Theory and Human Pharmacology and commented:
The Edwin Smith papyrus in the history of medicine
Rev Med Chile 2012; 140: 1357-1362.
Click to access art20.pdf
“The historical bases of occidental medicine precede the Hippocratic corpus. Between the third and first millennium B.C. Egyptian medicine developed a model of medical practice that was a reference horizon for other Mediterranean cultures. There are a great number of papyri of that time, which gathered the medical and surgical skills and that are matter of study. The Edwin Smith papyrus (PES) is one of them. We analyzed the PES in its historical context, its history, its structure and its medical and dental significance. Finally, we analyzed the relevance of PES as a sign of a change in the medicine study method in the ancient Egypt. PES is an insight into how medicine was practiced in ancient Egypt. Historically, it is also the first medical document based on objective observations, excluding all magical and religious perceptions, as well as the underlying cultural framework. The similarity between the
current clinical method and that described in the Smith papyrus, strongly suggests the idea that part of the origin of medicine, can be found in ancient Egypt.”
—
HT (chapeau): Lorena Franco.