A clear, thoughtful look at the principles behind surgical practice and decision making.
This classic work presents the general considerations of surgery, contrasting it with medicine and emphasizing conservatism, judgment, and the patient’s well‑being. It explains why surgery is tangible and how experience, pathology, and careful reasoning guide every choice, from urgent procedures to cautious, deliberate care.
Readers will encounter practical perspectives on when operations are truly necessary, when they are expedient, and when they may offer little chance of benefit. The pages discuss the limits of statistics, the value of surgical pathology, and the humane aims of relieving suffering and prolonging life. The material blends philosophy with visible, tactile clinical insight, aiming to ground surgical practice in sound judgment.
- Understand why surgery is described as both a science and an art, not just a set of techniques.
- Learn how to evaluate urgency, probability, and patient individuality beyond numbers.
- Explore the idea of external pathology and the importance of tactile diagnosis.
- See how statistics can inform, but not dictate, decisions about a single patient.
Ideal for students, practitioners, and readers interested in the history and philosophy of surgical practice.