Dr William Cullen (1710–1790) was a leading physician of the Enlightenment era. As professor in Edinburgh he became the most influential teacher of theoretical and practical medicine in 18th century Britain. A renowned private practitioner, Cullen systematically archived his postal ‘consultations’, now held by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. Initially Cullen preserved his replies as transcriptions, but from April 1781 he began using a mechanical copier, newly devised by the Scottish engineer James Watt. This paper describes the development, promotion and functioning of Watt’s copier and considers Cullen’s own adoption of the machine. It is suggested that with Cullen’s adoption of Watt’s copier, medical record keeping ...
William Cullen, lecturer in chemistry at Glasgow and Edinburgh Universities, spent many years formul...
Research ProjectPractically anything written in medical journals at present concerning computers may...
Perhaps no inventor or invention was as pivotal to the British industrial revolution than James Watt...
Dr William Cullen (1710–1790) was a leading physician of the Enlightenment era. As professor in Edi...
The archive of William Cullen's ‘Consultations’ held at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh...
Based on the writer's Presidential Address to the Royal Scottish Society of Arts.My story begins in ...
Features 25 different scientists and the ideas which may not have made them famous, but made history...
Paris, S. Jorry, 1748 – In-12Ces lettres traduites d’après l’édition anglaise de 1746 sont la mise e...
The Soho Manufactory in Birmingham is renowned, rightly, for its prodigious output of material objec...
Focusing on the life and career of William Cullen, I argue that during the eighteenth century no phy...
This is a case study in the history of electricity, based on William Thomson and his \u201capparatus...
The Enlightenment was a highly diverse intellectual movement that emerged in the first half of the 1...
This project, a collaboration between the School of Critical Studies at the University of Glasgow an...
ウィリアム・ウィリス没後100年追悼特集号 = A Centennial Memorial Issue of Dr. William Willis (1837-1894
The Cullen Project is a collaboration between the Medical Humanities Research Centre, School of Crit...
William Cullen, lecturer in chemistry at Glasgow and Edinburgh Universities, spent many years formul...
Research ProjectPractically anything written in medical journals at present concerning computers may...
Perhaps no inventor or invention was as pivotal to the British industrial revolution than James Watt...
Dr William Cullen (1710–1790) was a leading physician of the Enlightenment era. As professor in Edi...
The archive of William Cullen's ‘Consultations’ held at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh...
Based on the writer's Presidential Address to the Royal Scottish Society of Arts.My story begins in ...
Features 25 different scientists and the ideas which may not have made them famous, but made history...
Paris, S. Jorry, 1748 – In-12Ces lettres traduites d’après l’édition anglaise de 1746 sont la mise e...
The Soho Manufactory in Birmingham is renowned, rightly, for its prodigious output of material objec...
Focusing on the life and career of William Cullen, I argue that during the eighteenth century no phy...
This is a case study in the history of electricity, based on William Thomson and his \u201capparatus...
The Enlightenment was a highly diverse intellectual movement that emerged in the first half of the 1...
This project, a collaboration between the School of Critical Studies at the University of Glasgow an...
ウィリアム・ウィリス没後100年追悼特集号 = A Centennial Memorial Issue of Dr. William Willis (1837-1894
The Cullen Project is a collaboration between the Medical Humanities Research Centre, School of Crit...
William Cullen, lecturer in chemistry at Glasgow and Edinburgh Universities, spent many years formul...
Research ProjectPractically anything written in medical journals at present concerning computers may...
Perhaps no inventor or invention was as pivotal to the British industrial revolution than James Watt...