Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Physitians. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Physitians Quotes And Sayings by 90 Authors including Max Planck,Steven Hatfill,Mokokoma Mokhonoana,Peter Porter,Carson Mccullers for you to enjoy and share.
Experimenters are the shock troops of science.
I'm a medical doctor and a biomedical scientist.
A specialist's mind is a slave to his specialization.
A professional is one who believes he has invented breathing.
Doctors, by God; washing their hands, looking out windows, fiddling with dreadful things while you are stretched out on a table or half undressed on a chair.
The study of nature with a view to works is engaged in by the mechanic, the mathematician, the physician, the alchemist, and the magician; but by all as things now are with slight endeavour and scanty success.
I'd always had an interest in physiotherapy and psychology.
At some time in the future scientists, physicians, mediums and healers will have to work together to perfect the science of the whole.
Physic, for the most part, is nothing else but the substitute of exercise and temperance.
I'm a physician first and foremost. I will always be a physician.
The one profession where you can gain great eminence without ever being right.
My father was a research scientist in tropical medicine, so I always assumed I would be a scientist, too. I felt that medicine was too vague and inexact, so I chose physics.
God heales, and the Physitian hath the thankes.
I spend a lot of my time trying to draw the attention of actors to the minute and subtle details of human behavior, which was the sort of thing I was looking at when I was a neurologist.
We don't cease to be human when we choose to become health care professionals, yet our work demands that we operate at a machine-like rate, a machine with parts that never wear down.
In the year 1878 I took my degree of Doctor of Medicine of the University of London, and proceeded to Netley to go through the course prescribed for surgeons in the army. Having completed my studies there, I was duly attached to the Fifth Northumberland Fusiliers as Assistant Surgeon.
Men of Science. If they are worthy of the name they are indeed about God's path and about his bed and spying out all his ways.
...butcher, baker, fusion-reactor maker.
This field is not necessarily glamorous, nor does it often produce immediate results, but it seeks to increase our basic understanding of living processes.
I never knew what an engineer did for a living when I was a kid. I still don't.
There's so much knowledge to be had that specialists cling to their specialties as a shield against having to know anything about anything else. They avoid being drowned.
A metallurgist is someone who can look at a platinum blonde and tell whether she's virgin material or a common ore.
We are all of us more or less active physiognomists.
The physicists who look at their objects within their limitations teach physics; those who see the limitations they place around their objects teach "physics." For them physics is a poiesis.
We need people like you, Dobson," said Gina. "In academia, where I work. Man, do we ever need people like you. People who have been trained. To do the high-level work. Such as killing.
The physician must be able to tell the antecedents, know the present, and foretell the future - must mediate these things, and have two special objects in view with regard to disease, namely, to do good or to do no harm.
One has to look out for engineers - they begin with sewing machines and end up with the atomic bomb.
I began the study of medicine, impelled by a desire for knowledge of facts and of man. The resolution to do disciplined work tied me to both laboratory and clinic for a long time to come.
Science teachers and the mentally ill, that's all Jazz is for.
I knew I wanted to be a scientist. Which kind of scientist was the question.
The couturier should be a geometrician, for the human body makes
geometrical figures to which the materials should correspond.
on patrol with the study police
Physics, beware of metaphysics.
Of old when folk lay sick and sorely tried The doctors gave them physic, and they died. But here's a happier age: for now we know Both how to make men sick and keep them so.
Who remove stones, bruise their fingers.
We've been finding that when you empower engineers, scientists, and coders, they respond by creating new tools to empower physicians, patients, and parents.
The successful teacher is no longer on a height, pumping knowledge at high pressure into passive receptacles ...
I'm a doctor; we work in teams. I'm very committed to problem solving.
Figure 1-1 THE PHYSICIAN-AS-EXPERT MODEL.
Engineering stimulates the mind.
We need very much a name to describe a cultivator of science in general. I should incline to call him a scientist. [The first use of the word.]
Physicist is both to my mouth and ears so awkward that I think I shall never use it. The equivalent of three separate sounds of "I" in one word is too much.
To those who have chosen the profession of medicine, a knowledge of chemistry, and of some branches of natural history, and, indeed, of several other departments of science, affords useful assistance.
A metaphysician is one who, when you remark that twice two makes four, demands to know what you mean by twice, what by two, what by makes, and what by four. For asking such questions metaphysicians are supported in oriental luxury in the universities, and respected as educated and intelligent men.
If someone is interested in medicine and also in physics and they like working with people and communicate well with others, I would strongly encourage them.
I am a scientist and I am a physician. So I write papers.
I have devoted much time and energy to helping medical physics in developing countries.
Physic himself must fade.
All things to end are made;
The plague full swift goes by.
I am sick, I must die
P.98
But nothing is more estimable than a physician who, having studied nature from his youth, knows the properties of the human body, the diseases which assail it, the remedies which will benefit it, exercises his art with caution, and pays equal attention to the rich and the poor.
These are the Disciplines that can change everything!
Doctors will have more lives to answer for in the next world than even we generals.
I'm an engineer. I'm a techie, really.
Physicians are many in title but very few in reality.
I was a kind of a one-man army. I could solder circuits together, I could turn out things on the lathe, I could work with rockets and balloons. I'm a kind of a hybrid between an engineer and a physicist and astronomer.
Medicine, the only profession that labors incessantly to destroy the reason for its existence.
I found collaborating with congenial doctors about problems that physicists could help solve was very satisfying. I also like educating anybody who would listen!
I went to school for about 2 years on a technical course, and I learned a lot. I learned about air mixture ratios and all the stuff; I learned how to draw blood.
Physicians attend to the business of physicians, and workmen handle the tools of workmen.
[Lat., Quod medicorum est
Promittunt medici, tractant fabrilia fabri.]
Modeling gave me a strong discipline of professionalism where you work very long hours.
Everyone [in higher education] was what I call drillers of deeper wells. These academics sit at the bottom of a deep well and they look up and see a sliver of the sky. They know everything about that little sliver of sky and nothing else. I scan all my horizons.
A physician is one who pours drugs of which he knows little into a body of which he knows less.
The flight of most members of a profession to the high empyrean, where they can work peacefully on purely scientific problems, isolated from the turmoil of real life, was perhaps quite appropriate at an earlier stage of science; but in today's world it is a luxury we cannot afford.
Physiology and psychology cover, between them, the field of vital phenomena; they deal with the facts of life at large, and in particular with the facts of human life.
I'm training to become a giggle doctor. It's a kind of hospital clown who changes the atmosphere on the ward and helps recovery. It's about making patients laugh but also much more.
My mom's a mad scientist. It's a lot like being a regular scientist, except without worrying about legal or moral limitations, and it's a commom profession among the scientifically inclined supervillain.
I study the universe. It's the second oldest profession. People have been looking up for a long time.
The practice of medicine is a thinker's art the practice of surgery a plumber's.
I was trained as a neurologist, and then I went into the theater, and if you're brought up to think of yourself as a biological scientist of some sort, pretty well everything else seems frivolous by comparison.
[...] the kind of healer who knows that sometimes one must inflict terrible agony - rebreak a bone, carve off a limb, kill the weak - in order to make the whole stronger.
There are now over 5,000 medical physicists in the U.S more than 50 times the number in 1958.
Those professions which are not so much involved in life itself as concerned with abstract truths are the most dangerous for the young man whose principles are not yet firm and whose convictions are not yet strong and unshakeable.
Children are marvelously and intuitively correct physiognomists. The youngest of them exhibit this trait.
Surgeons are not technicians; they're not mechanics. They're artists. I see patterns where not many other people see patterns ... I think that's what made me a good surgeon, and now, that's what's making me a good writer.
My background educationally is physics and economics, and I grew up in sort of an engineering environment - my father is an electromechanical engineer. And so there were lots of engineery things around me.
All medical procedures require two hands, so in a sense it's like when you play an instrument. That's what they call things that they use in their work: They call them instruments. A lot of people start out majoring in medicine and drop it and change their major to music.
A professional sex therapist." Gabe moved out into the hall. "Guess I should show some respect. They do say it's the oldest profession. No, wait, maybe I've got that mixed up with another line of work.
There is no nobler profession, nor no greater calling, than to be among those unheralded many who gave and give their lives to the preservation of human knowledge, passed with commitment and care from one generation to the next.
Our job involves looking at things that people usually can't see.
I'm an ER doctor, period. I look at a problem with a certain lens: very action-oriented, very results-oriented.
Job, requiring intellectual ability and acuity
I'm an artistic person and a creator. I'm not a scientific. I'm not an engineer.
Dominant energy patterns that are contributing to the stress in a human being, are able to be picked up, if a person is open enough. And for me, as a medical intuitive, that's where I focus my attention. That's what the skill is all about.
Coming from an athletic background, the scientific aspect is a really big part of understanding beauty and how the body works.
As a boy, it was clear that my inclinations were toward the physical sciences. Mathematics, mechanics, and chemistry were among the fields that gave me a special satisfaction.
I am a toxico-nutritional neuro-epidemiologist. It's the study of neurological disorders caused by a mixture of toxins and malnutrition using epidemiological methods ... We are just three or four in the world, even fewer than sword swallowers.
Medicine people are truly citizens of two worlds, and those who continue to walk the path of medicine power learn to keep their balance in both the ordinary and the non-ordinary worlds ...
How do you become someone with X-ray vision?
The experienced physician, mechanic, or physiologist looking at a wound, an engine, a microscopic preparation, "sees" things the novice does not see. If both, experts and laymen, were asked to make exact copies of what they see, their drawings would be quite different.
I dread specialists in power because they are specialists speaking outside of their special subject.
Some people work with a trainer, some people work with a stylist. I work with a celebrity fecalist. A fecalist is basically a person who comes and collects my stools, and then examines them to see if I'm eating right and if I should be drinking more water and what my moods should be.
The proper role of humanists is not to bring 'human values' to the attention of technicians otherwise engaged in a purely instrumental approach to their calling, but to demand the restoration of the practical or moral element in callings that have degenerated into techniques.
Men of science offer us health, an obvious benefit; it is only afterwards that we discover that by health, they mean bodily slavery and spiritual tedium.
My background is in physics, so I was the mission specialist, who is sort of like the flight engineer on an airplane.
Extremely dangerous drug-related occupations for which decoy served as a paid audition of sorts. A start weapons system was a wise investment. The
I know of no teachers so powerful and persuasive as the little army of specialists. They carry no banners, they beat no drums; but where they are men learn that bustle and push are not the equals of quiet genius and serene mastery.
My dad is a doctor, a professor of psychiatry, and my mum is a psychotherapist.
Keep in mind that if you take a tour through a hospital and look at every machine with on and off switch that is brought into the service of diagnosing the human condition, that machine is based on principles of physics discovered by a physicist in a machine designed by an engineer.
Every discipline develops standards of professional competence to which its workers are subject ... Every scientific community is a society in the small, so to speak, with its own agencies of social control.
Prefects. I had learned this one. Student council types, but with superpowers. They who must be obeyed.
My scientific work is motivated by an irresistible longing to understand the secrets of nature and by no other feeling. My love for justice and striving to contribute towards the improvement of human conditions are quite independent from my scientific interests.