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John
Hunter
(1728-1793)
Born near Glasgow, in East Kilbride, Scotland, John Hunter studied
anatomy and surgery in London, first at St. Bartholomew's Hospital
under the direction of Percivall Pott, then at St. George's, where
he spent twenty-five years as an instructor of anatomy and surgery.
He also served as a surgeon with the British army during the Seven
Years' War (1756-63).
Hunter
is considered, with Ambroise Paré and Joseph Lister, one
of the three greatest surgeons of all time. He is credited with
having raised English surgery from a mere "technical trade"
to its position as equal to other medical specialties. He rejected
academic speculation and insisted on experimentation and direct
observation. Hunter expressed this basic tenet in an often-quoted
remark to his most famous student, Edward Jenner: "Don't
think, try."
Aside
from his research and teaching in anatomy and surgery, Hunter
wrote important works on teeth (he coined the terms cuspids, bicuspids,
molars, and incisors), sexually transmitted disease, and inflammation.
A Treatise on the Blood, Inflammation, and Gun-shot Wounds, a
compilation of Hunter's observations during the Seven Years' War,
was published posthumously in 1794. The Natural History of Human
Teeth, which is regarded as the first scientific basis for dentistry,
was produced in 1778.
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