翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Edwin Hall (disambiguation)
・ Edwin Hallowell
・ Edwin Hamilton Davis
・ Edwin Hanbury
・ Edwin Handley
・ Edwin Hansen
・ Edwin Hansford
・ Edwin Hanson Webster
・ Edwin Hardwick Moore
・ Edwin Harlan
・ Edwin Harris
・ Edwin Harris (cricketer)
・ Edwin Harris Dunning
・ Edwin Harrison
・ Edwin Harrison McHenry
Edwin Hartley Pratt
・ Edwin Hartmann
・ Edwin Haslam
・ Edwin Hatch
・ Edwin Hawkins
・ Edwin Hawley Hewitt
・ Edwin Hayes
・ Edwin Hayes and Campbell Scott
・ Edwin Hayne
・ Edwin Hazelton
・ Edwin Healy
・ Edwin Heathcote
・ Edwin Hedberg
・ Edwin Hedley
・ Edwin Helfant


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Edwin Hartley Pratt : ウィキペディア英語版
Edwin Hartley Pratt

Edwin Hartley Pratt (1849–1930), or E.H. Pratt, was a prominent American practitioner of homeopathic medicine in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He originated the briefly popular practice of "orificial surgery," which sought to cure a variety of physical and psychological ills by surgical corrections to the various orifices of the body. He was the founder and editor-in-chief of the ''Journal of Orificial Surgery''.
Pratt served for 20 years as attending surgeon for Cook County Hospital, and also founded his own institute, the Lincoln Park Sanitarium. His ideas were extremely popular for a time, but fell into general disrepute by the early 20th century.
==Early life and education==

Edwin Hartley Pratt was born on November 6, 1849, in Towanda, Pennsylvania. His parents were Betsey Belding Pratt and the homeopathic physician Leonard Pratt. In 1852, they moved to northwestern Illinois; in his boyhood, Pratt attended the district school in Rock Creek Township.
At the age of 15 in 1864, Pratt attended the nearby Mount Carroll Seminary (later known as Shimer College). He remained there only one year, but thirty years later wrote that "I was so impressed with the measures of instruction, and such a spirit of earnestness prevailed in the school, that the memory of that year's work has never been dimmed by the rushing and turbulent experiences of the years that have since gone by".
Pratt next enrolled in Wheaton College. At the time, the college was strongly identified with anti-Masonic beliefs, and forbade all students from joining secret societies. When his father joined the Independent Order of Good Templars in 1865, Pratt joined him as a member of the order; Soon thereafter, he was given the choice of expulsion or leaving the order, and chose expulsion. His father sued the school over the expulsion, but ultimately lost before the Illinois Supreme Court in ''Pratt v. Wheaton College'', which established the principle of ''in loco parentis'' in Illinois common law.
Moving on from Wheaton, in 1866, Pratt enrolled at the old University of Chicago, in the second year of the preparatory department; he completed the preparatory and baccalaureate courses and graduated in 1871. He was a member of the Tri Kappa literary society and Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Pratt had initially hoped to become a lawyer, but was prevailed upon by his physician father to enter into medicine instead. In 1873 he received his MD from Hahnemann Medical College in Chicago, a homeopathic school where his father was teaching. He graduated as valedictorian. Upon graduation he was invited to join the faculty as an adjunct professor, and did so after an additional term of study at Jefferson Medical College and "Keene's School of Anatomy" in Philadelphia.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Edwin Hartley Pratt」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.