Rudolf Virchow quotes:

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  • Cellular pathology is not an end if one cannot see any alteration in the cell. Chemistry brings the clarification of living processes nearer than does anatomy. Each anatomical change must have been preceded by a chemical one.

  • The task of science is to stake out the limits of the knowable, and to center consciousness within them.

  • Medical education does not exist to provide students with a way of making a living, but to ensure the health of the community.

  • Laws should be made, not against quacks but against superstition.

  • Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing more than medicine on a grand scale.

  • Belief begins where science leaves off and ends where science begins.

  • Belief cannot be reckoned with in terms of science, for science and faith are mutually exclusive.

  • Belief has no place as far as science reaches, and may be first permitted to take root where science stops.

  • Body: A cell state in which every cell is a citizen.

  • Brevity in writing is the best insurance for its perusal.

  • If popular medicine gave the people wisdom as well as knowledge, it would be the best protection for scientific and well-trained physicians.

  • Imprisoned quacks are always replaced by new ones.

  • Marriages are not normally made to avoid having children.

  • Medical statistics will be our standard of measurement: we will weigh life for life and see where the dead lie thicker, among the workers or among the privileged.

  • The body is a cell state in which every cell is a citizen. Disease is merely the conflict of the citizens of the state brought about by the action of external forces.

  • Between animal and human medicine, there is no dividing line-nor should there be.

  • As long as vitalism and spiritualism are open questions so long will the gateway of science be open to mysticism.

  • Disease is not something personal and special, but only a manifestation of life under modified conditions, operating according to the same laws as apply to the living body at all times, from the first moment until death.

  • First, it must be a pleasure to study the human body the most miraculous masterpiece of nature and to learn about the smallest vessel and the smallest fiber. But second and most important, the medical profession gives the opportunity to alleviate the troubles of the body, to ease the pain, to console a person who is in distress, and to lighten the hour of death of many a sufferer.

  • If we would serve science, we must extend her limits, not only as far as our own knowledge is concerned, but in the estimation of others.

  • It is the curse of humanity that it learns to tolerate even the most horrible situations by habituation, that it forgets the most shameful happenings in the daily shame of events, and that it can hardly understand when individuals aim to destroy this infamy.

  • It is the curse of humanity that it learns to tolerate even the most horrible situations by habituation.

  • Life itself is but the expression of a sum of phenomena, each of which follows the ordinary physical and chemical laws.

  • Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing else but medicine on a large scale. Medicine, as a social science, as the science of human beings, has the obligation to point out problems and to attempt their theoretical solution: the politician, the practical anthropologist, must find the means for their actual solution. The physicians are the natural attorneys of the poor, and social problems fall to a large extent within their jurisdiction.

  • My politics were those of prophylaxis, my opponents preferred those of palliation.

  • No doubt science cannot admit of compromises, and can only bring out the complete truth. Hence there must be controversy, and the strife may be, and sometimes must be, sharp. But must it even then be personal? Does it help science to attack the man as well as the statement? On the contrary, has not science the noble privilege of carrying on its controversies without personal quarrels?

  • Only those who regard healing as the ultimate goal of their efforts can, therefore, be designated as physicians.

  • 'Science in itself' is nothing, for it exists only in the human beings who are its bearers. 'Science for its own sake' usually means nothing more than science for the sake of the people who happen to be pursuing it.

  • The physicians are the natural attorneys of the poor, and the social problems should largely be solved by them.

  • The task of science, therefore, is not to attack the objects of faith, but to establish the limits beyond which knowledge cannot go and found a unified self-consciousness within these limits.

  • There can be no scientific dispute with respect to faith, for science and faith exclude one another.

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