Selected quad for the lemma: reason_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
reason_n day_n time_n week_n 2,306 5 9.4790 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A50435 Ignota febris Fevers mistaken in notion & practice. Shewing the frequent fatal consequents thereof. Herein traversing the dissenting new hypotheses of some late writers: and erroneous opinions, of antique authors. With remarks upon bleeding, blistering, juleps, and the Jesuits pouder, in fevers. By Everard Maynwaringe, Med. D. Maynwaringe, Everard, 1628-1699? 1698 (1698) Wing M1495; ESTC R217776 69,714 170

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

by the way The same Author appoints the Peruvian Bark to be reduced in alcool into the most minute or finest Pouder quo facilius per habitum corporis trajiciatur p. 179. that it may the more readily pass through the habit of the Body But if I were to use this Pouder I should chuse rather to have it grosly beaten that the vertue may be extracted only and conveyed where and how nature pleaseth But the Substance more fitly to be carried downwards to be voided with Excrement For I cannot think it safe that so much Pouder of a ligneous indissoluble Substance should commix with the Blood and be imported into the smaller vessels but by incrassating that stream it must cause obstructions of very ill consequence tho' the Pouder be genuine und true But since it is so much adulterated and abused as this Author tells us and the Dose therefore to be augmented double or treble I cannot think otherwise but it must then make ill work in the Body and that there will be need of another Antidote or a Course of Physick against the mischief of this famous Febrifuge And this medicine making no manifest Operation we may fear that both the Dregs of the Disease and the Dregs of the Medicine do remain in the Body Therefore I am apt to believe it was not for nothing or no cause that Vopiscus Plempius a learned Physician of Note did charge this American Bark and condemn'd it as guilty of many misdemeanors and Homicide His words are these Plures tertio vel quarto reciderunt plurique cachectici facti nonnulli mortui Item Magnates hujus Aulae nominare possem qui ab usu Pulveris extenuati sunt ad Phthisin pracipites facti in usu longo lactis Asinini restituti fuissent I do not think it necessary that this Pouder or any Medicine of that substance should be conveyed Materialiter into every Part of the Body to discharge its virtue Nature does not operate after that manner with Medicinal Help is not bound to transport by Canals for her Relief but transmits virtualiter and influentially penetrating tatam Partium Compaginem Diaphoretics operate after the same manner Nor do I think it necessary or convenient the best and richest Cordial Pouder should be introduced into the Habit of the Body But let that pass The Jesuits Pouder was cried up and promoted in Italy by Sebastian Badus a Physician of Genoa And there were others that as much decried it as not being steddy and constant in good effects or doing no Hurt but oftentimes as being the cause of much ill and thereby went under an ill Name Which Party we are to credit in this matter I leave every one to Judge This we well know that the Duke of Savoy by several Accounts received about two years since was in a valetudinary State for a long Time caused by an Ague which for many Months continued in going and coming again Very probably this Febrifuge was the chiefest Remedy which put by the Fits for a Time But the minera Morbi the morbific cause not being discharged and sent forth the Fits returned again several Times But Supposing his Physicians did not advise the use of this Medicine or did not continue the use of it we may conclude it was under some disgrace or not in such Repute there as formerly But let us go on The Pouder is appointed to be taken in the Intermissions of Ague Fits every fourth Hour And when there is such a Cessation of the intermitting Fever or Ague as seemingly Cured yet that is no security but you must Continue the use of the Pouder thrice a Day for three Weeks or a Month intervallo octo vel decem Dierum as our Author appoints P. 132. I find hereby that this famous Bark makes but an uncertain and a tedious Cure for when it will be perfected who can tell Our Author gives us the Reason thereof in another Place P. 76 and 77. to this purpose That the febrile venom hath a fixed and determined Time of Duration either for weeks months and sometimes years That although it be subdued and seemingly cured for a Time yet it will revive again until the venemous fomes metam suam ultimam attigerit hath run its Course and spent it self P. 76 and 77. If it be so how does the virtue and great Power of the Antidote appear This is small Hopes for the Patient and little Incouragement to use Means since there is such a determinate Time of Cure and before which it cannot be But to make us Amends for this great Impediment And to keep up the Reputation of the Febrifuge He saith We may be glad that we have such a Remedy as can relieve Nature oppressed and worn down when we please by this Febrifuge and prevent the fatal event P. 77 78. So that we are hereby secured from Death but when we may be rid from the Fever or Ague that 's uncertain tho' we use this great Antidote famed so potent against the febrile venom If this be all that can be expected from this Pouder then I shall not trust to the occult Quality of this Medicine and which makes only an occult Operation in the Patient least the good effects prove occult also But I am for a Medicine that works manifestly and therein more probably to effect a cure more certainly by Operations that we know how and which way a Disease goes off And such is the Catholic Extract that makes a manifest Operation but very gentle which is much more pleasant and easie to take than the Peruvian Bark And we have more Reason to hope and expect the desired effects from this Catholic Purifier because it carries off and frees the Body from offensive depraved impure Matter the minera morborum termed venom by this Author thereby it does perform a radical Cure of Agues not a fallacious Cessation and we shall not fear a Relaps or Return And so much I dare promise upon a Forfeit By such certainty properly and only we may call Curing This Catholic Extract being of my own Elaboration perfected by divers Alterations and gradual Improvements I can presume upon from many Proofs to do more and better service in Fevers therefore in various Diseases whereon they depend than any single Medicine that I can know of Extant in the World And I have examined the best Authors and Pharmacopoeia's for that Purpose As for Prescripts the sudden Inventions pro re nata and suddenly to be made at the Shops I do not inquire for any extraordinary piece of Art in that way nor in Reason can we expect it there I shall not here Discourse the Latitude and Comprehension of this Medicine The excelling Properties in Operation and Performance its Commodiousness for use Durability and Portage for emergent occasions abroad For my own Part and particular private use I had rather be destitute of all other Medicines than to want this For I am more beholden to this
then shall a proper Method with effectual true Medicines be adapted for their Cures I must confess had I no Knowledge nor Guide to direct me herein but Books I should be at a stand and much puzled what Course to steer and with what Means to do the Business required or aimed at when such Fevers present But how pernicious are the Methods and Medicines for the Cure hereof as appointed by Authors we shall see anon when I come to set forth the Practice SECT V. Of Fevers Continual and Intermittent ACcording to Method and Custom I have not omitted this Difference and Distinction of Fevers but shall say no more in this Place than what distinguisheth one from the other Continual Fevers are such as have no perfect Intermission but only sometimes they have Intensions and Remissions And from the difference of their exacerbations in Distance whether every Day or every third or fourth Day they are called Continual Quotidian Tertian or Quartan But the consideration hereof is not of such Moment in Practice as to require various Methods of Curing and therefore I shall not trouble you with the Niceties and Distinctions of Authors reasoning thereupon Intermitting Fevers are such as in the English are called Agues And these are Quotidian Tertian and Quartan from their Cessations and Intermissions coming and going on such Days In assigning Causes for the periodic Returns of these Fevers on Certain and Several Days and for their Duplication and Triplication Authors do so much differ in their Opinions that an Account of their Conjectures Reasonings and Probabilities would give us more Trouble than Profit I shall therefore wave those Disputes that we may sooner come to the Curative Part which is more Satisfactory and Useful that proves more certainly what is true or false SECT VI. Of Fevers Malignant so called Measels Small-Pox and Pestilential HERE we make Malignant as the Genus comprising several Species under that general Denomination I shall first examine the Import of the word what is meant thereby and then inquire into the particular differences of Malignant Diseases For if we have not a true knowledge of the Sense and Import of the generical word we cannot have a distinct intelligible Account of the Species or kinds thereof I hear great talk of Malignant Fevers sometimes and I Consult Authors upon that Subject But I am not satisfied what they mean and so far as I can gather by the Discourses they do not well know what they mean themselves at least not how to set it forth For they have laboured to explicate the Intention and Scope of the word Malignant and rank it with intellible Doctrine But in fine the Result terminates in occult Qualities And this is acknowledged by a late famous Author treating of malignant and pestilential Fevers Ignotam ducunt originem ut earum Causae essentia sine recursu ad occultas qualitates raro explicentur Dr. Willis de Febr. How comes this word Malignant to be tackt as an Adjunct belonging to Fevers Malignant Fevers so much and often treated I know none such For all febrile Heat in gradu Summo remisso is but the same Heat in specie issuing from the same vital Principle and only differing gradually Furthermore those Fevers which are called Malignant are observed by the best Judgments to have their Heat more mild and moderate than other Fevers that are accounted and termed benign Therefore malignant affixed to Fevers as a distinguishing Character is an improper Compounding and Confounding of words together making the Sense and Meaning thereof intricate and perplext which breeds confusion and mistakes in Practice Clarioris Doctrinae gratiâ nec non verioris we must first understand what that thing is which truly may be called Malignant Then Secondly to what this Malignant Thing bears Enmity or evil against which it would hurt These two Points being rightly stated illustrates and clears the Doctrine from Obscurity Ambiguity and Intanglement Malignant by the Import of the word signifies Evil Malicious and Hurtful And it is used by Physicians to set forth that which is very Evil Pernicious and Dangerous more than ordinary And therefore Diseases arising from such malignant Causes are accounted worse than others That which denominates and makes Diseases Malignant is either some inbred Matter in Human Bodies highly and variously degenerated into a malignant venemous state as producing Cancers Gangrens Leprosie Small-Pox c. And this variously depraved malignant Matter is capable of no other Description and Distinction than what the Symptomatical Products and Effects thereof does manifest the Heterogenity of such causes in Human Bodies Pertinent to our Purpose Van Helmont Speaks tho' about to prove something else Excrement●m venenosum in Febribus praecordis includi producens sopores deliria c. ergo virus anodinum est amens In caducis paritur esse venenum insensitivum amens pro spatio affligens in praecordiis stabulatum In Amentiis hypochondriacis venenum fur●osum vel cum joco delirans In vertigine virus rotans In apoplexia tollens sensum motum p. 268. Hence you may understand that great variety of venemous malignant matter is sometimes generated in Human Body producing many different and dangerous Effects afflicting variously Or else Secondly Malignant Diseases are caused and received from without As when the Air that surrounds and enters the Body is infected with noxious exhalations and vaporous malignant effluviums arising out of the Earth from carrion or dead Bodies expirations of venemous Creatures or by Influx of the Stars producing epidemical Malignant Diseases As the Pestilence or Pestilential and malignant in a lower Degree Or by the Bite of some venemous Creature or by depraved Corrupt Food or virulent Physick And this malignant matter whether inbred or imperceptible Miasms from without they do shew their Pravity Taint and Infection by the direful destructive Symptoms that attend their Operations and Alterations made in Human Body variously Quicquid recipitur recipitur per modum recipientis Some malignant Matter being more acute deleterious does destroy sooner Others not so fierce and active do take more Time in killing yet are more difficult and obstinate in yielding to means than other Diseases that are not malignant All which does prove that Diseases are rightly called malignant from the material Cause only of which they are bred Secondly We must discern to what more immediately and directly this malignant matter is opposite to and where it makes the first Attack and Impression where the Stress of Malignity aims first and lyes most upon Not to and upon animal Spirits because the Enmity and Contrariety is not founded between them as Antagonists For granting there were no animal Spirits in Human Nature the Repugnancy Discordance and Hostility by malignant venom would be the same and the symptomatical Effects in like manner the same And it is but rational so to determine Because Sympathy and Antipathy Amity and Opposition in the nature of Creatures issue