<p>‘A superb book – fluent, lucid, scary and even funny…essential reading.’ Sunday Times</p>
<p>‘Magnificently erudite and compellingly humane.’ New Statesman (Books of the Year)</p>
<p>‘Yet another compulsively readable, astonishingly encyclopaedic book from Roy Porter…his best to date: an epic, one-volume narrative history of man’s struggle with the infirmities of his body, from Aesculapius to AIDS.’ Simon Schama</p>
<p>‘Whether you are interested in the advent of the stethoscope, the history of yellow fever, the bubonic plague or, closer to home, coronary heart disease, the feminist influence on medicine, drug abuse, childbearing or cancer, this book provides the historic background to these and other medical questions…”The Greatest Benefit to Mankind” is a first-class introduction to medical history. Like a well constructed broadsheet leader, it excites thought and discussion, as well as providing many answers.’ The Times</p>
<p>‘Hypochondriac heaven – a gripping, scholarly, fact-packed, must-have book.’ Daily Mail</p>
<p>‘A monumental work… magnificent.’ Independent on Sunday</p>

A definitive study of the history of medicine, from the earliest humans to the present day.

Medicine is advancing at an incredible rate. We now have the ability to overcome sickness but also to transform the nature of life itself: in many parts of the world, human existence has simply ceased to be ‘nasty, brutish and short’. In this titanic history of medicine and disease, Roy Porter examines the traditions of East and West to chart how this revolution has come about.

Covering medical milestones big and small – from dissection to surgery and from anaesthesia to AIDS – Roy Porter’s masterpiece is both a superlative history of medicine and a sweeping survey of human life and death.

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<p>A definitive study of the history of medicine, from the earliest humans to the present day.</p>

Medicine advances ever faster, and with it a capacity not just to overcome sickness, but to transform the nature of life itself. Beginning in antiquity, Roy Porter's titanic history examines the traditions of both East and West to chart how this revolution came about and how life for human beings, in some parts of the world at least, has ceased to be nasty, brutish and short. 'The Greatest Benefit to Mankind' becomes from the moment of publication the standard work on its subject. It is also a magnificent entertainment and a delight to read.

"A superb book – fluent, lucid, scary and even funny…essential reading; first, because Porter is a brilliant and central anatomiser of our present predicament and second, because, to a large extent, medicine 'is' our present predicament – the violent battlefield at the intersection of what we think we know and what we think we are. There is no more urgent place to be, no more, in the highest sense, topical book to read."
BRYAN APPLEYARD, SUNDAY TIMES

"Hypochondriac heaven – a gripping, scholarly, fact-packed, must-have book."
VAL HENNESSY, DAILY MAIL

"A monumental work… Porter's deftness in synthesising both historical and technical material, and his ability to give flesh to his arguments, turns what might have been a stolid narrative into an enthralling story…Magnificent."
KENAN MALIK, INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY

"Whether you are interested in the advent of the stethoscope, the history of yellow fever, the bubonic plague or coronary heart disease, the feminist influence on medicine, drug abuse, chilbearing or cancer, this book provides the historical background to these and other medical questions…this is a first-class introduction to medical history. Like a well constructed broadsheet leader, it excites thought and discussion."
THOMAS STUTTAFORD, THE TIMES

"A splendid text that will be of huge value to most professional practitioners, students and general readers. Certainly no medical student in the English-speaking world will want to be without it…I cannot but marvel at this magnificent book, which, after it has left my bedside, will take pride of place on my reference shelf."
JOHN CORNWELL, LITERARY REVIEW

"Roy Porter has succeeded triumphantly…In recent discussions surrounding the Booker Prize, contemporary readers were accused of deserting fiction for biography or history. This compulsively readable book makes it easy to see why."
STEPHEN LOCK, EVENING STANDARD

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• The Greatest Benefit to Mankind received massive unanimous critical acclaim on first publication.

• The book sold over 15,000 copies in hardback (at £25) and was a Waterstone’s Christmas Choice.

• National press advertising for paperback publication.

Competition: None

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780006374541
Publisert
1999-02-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Fontana Press
Vekt
950 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
153 mm
Dybde
56 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
848

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Roy Porter is Professor of the Social History of Medicine at the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine. He is the editor of the Fontana History of Science series, and the author of over sixty-five books, including the acclaimed bestseller ‘London: A Social History’. His book on the history of madness in England, ‘Mind Forg’d Manacles’, won the Leo Gershoy Prize.