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  1. Apr 16, 2024 · The use of laughter has been used in the medical space for centuries, but researchers began collecting data on its use as medicine in the 1960s, after renowned journalist Norman Cousins noted his own medical journey with laughter.

  2. He died in 1990 from coronary heart disease and congestive heart failure, 26 years after his experience with inflammatory spine disease. A less dramatic but nonetheless moving testimonial to laughter was recorded by Joseph Heller and his friend Speed Vogel in the book No Laughing Matter (9).

    • Allen B. Weisse
    • 2017
  3. Nov 12, 2017 · Our culture today still bears the imprint of a long-passed system of medicine. From the time of Hippocrates in Ancient Greece through to the dawn of scientific medicine in the 19th century, human temperament was understood in terms of four humours that were thought to exist within the body â?"

  4. Nov 2, 2023 · Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain remedies and bloodletting lives on today. This 15th-century medical manuscript shows different colors...

  5. Because laughter today arises and exerts effects within a society that is patriarchal and heteronormative in its basic structure, even the most radical, emancipatory laughter remains parasitic on and reinscribes these oppressive logics.

  6. Jul 1, 2002 · By 1900, the germ theory was indisputably established in western medicine. Throughout the first half of the 20th century, infectious medicine was ruled by the dominance of the germ theory and the spectacular control of germs that antibiotics increasingly afforded.

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  8. The first medical society was organized in Boston in 1735. In the 18th century, 117 Americans from wealthy families had graduated in medicine in Edinburgh, Scotland, but most physicians learned as apprentices in the colonies. [12] .