The necessity of disinterment, under existing circumstances
Explore more books like this:
About This Book
A surgeon addresses the city mayor to defend his conduct after prosecution for possessing an exhumed body, explaining his change of venue to avoid prejudiced jurors and recounting the circumstances of the removal, identification, and searches that followed. He criticizes parish officers and magistrates for overzealous and vindictive procedures, including an attempted felony charge over minor missing linen, and argues that reliance on precarious supplies of buried bodies hinders anatomical instruction. He urges reforms to provide lawful, respectful access to corpses for medical education while acknowledging public sensibilities and proposing measures to facilitate the acquisition of subjects for study.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Vocabulum; or The Rogue's Lexicon / Compiled from the Most Authentic Sources
by George W. Matsell
The Hunterian lectures on colour-vision and colour-blindness
by F. W. Edridge-Green
Putnam's Handy Law Book for the Layman
by Albert Sidney Bolles
A Study of Association in Insanity
by Grace Helen Kent
Extraction of the Teeth
by Frank Colyer
History of the Water Supply of the World / arranged in a comprehensive form from eminent authorities, containing a description of the various methods of water supply, pollution and purification of waters, and sanitary effects, with analyses of potable waters, also geology and water strata of Hamilton county, Ohio, statistics of the Ohio river, proposed water supply of Cincinnati.
by Thomas J. Bell
