Definition of Iatromechanical. Meaning of Iatromechanical. Synonyms of Iatromechanical

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Iatromechanical. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Iatromechanical and, of course, Iatromechanical synonyms and on the right images related to the word Iatromechanical.

Definition of Iatromechanical

No result for Iatromechanical. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Iatromechanical from wikipedia

- Bellini's concept of catarrh: an examination of a seventeenth-century iatromechanical viewpoint. Clio Medica (Amsterdam, Netherlands). Vol. 9. pp. 317–323...
- physician, mathematician, and one of the most fervent advocates of the iatromechanical school. Congetture fisico-meccaniche intorno le figure delle particelle...
- animal functions...[which] became the bible of the iatromathematical or iatromechanical school...". The book attempted to clarify the cause of muscle fatigue...
- Iatrophysics or iatromechanics (fr. Gr****) is the medical application of physics. It provides an explanation for medical practices with mechanical principles...
- physician and writer on physiology who was an early follower of the iatromechanical explanation of human organ functioning. Berger was born in Halle an...
- particularly the vitalist medical model that opposed the Cartesian iatromechanical model developed by Friedrich Hoffmann and Herman Boerhaave. In 1710...
- morphological findings was adversely influenced by his adherence to the "iatromechanical doctrine," whereby the function of an organ was merely based on its...
- scientific German surgeon. He is one of the most prominent scholars in the iatromechanics school and author of 20 medical books. His Observationum et Curationum...
- the blood, rather than Hippocrates). His championing of this new 'iatromechanical' theory of physiology pla**** a large part in his professorial appointments...
- 'gunpowder theory' of muscle function. He was sceptical about the iatromechanical theories of Herman Boerhaave (1668–1738) and Thomas Willis (1621–75)...