
A thoughtful collection of medical essays and lectures from the late eighteenth‑century, this volume presents the work of a leading physician‑educator who sought to link the body’s physical conditions with the mind’s moral capacities. Delivered before the American Philosophical Society, the opening discourse explores how bodily influences might shape the “moral faculty,” distinguishing it from the more familiar conscience.
The book then turns to a series of detailed observations on the diseases that plagued the era: the causes and treatments of pulmonary consumption, various forms of dropsy, gout, and hydrophobia, as well as vivid accounts of measles and influenza outbreaks in Philadelphia. Interwoven are philosophical reflections on the nature of animal life, offering a rare glimpse of how early physicians blended clinical practice with broader scientific speculation.
For listeners, the text offers a window into the language, reasoning, and medical challenges of a formative period in American medicine. Its blend of empirical case studies and moral inquiry makes it both a historical document and a reminder of the enduring quest to understand the body‑mind connection.
Full title
Medical Inquiries and Observations, Vol. 2 The Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged by the Author
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (504K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2019-02-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1746–1813
A physician, reformer, and founding father, he helped shape early American medicine while also signing the Declaration of Independence. His writing ranged from public health and education to mental health and the dangers of alcohol abuse.
View all books