The Desideratum; or, Electricity Made Plain and Useful
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Desideratum oo; walla, Elektrik waɗaama laaɓɗo e nafoore - E yiɗde aadee, e hakkille laaɓɗo ko deftere John Wesley winndi e hitaande 1760, ina ɗaɓɓi huutoraade safaara ɓuuɓɗo. Wesley mooftii ciimtol wiɗtooɓe woɗɓe e "masiŋaaji kuutortooɗi kuuraa", o ɓeydi heen ƴeewndorɗe ummoraade e jarribooji makko e nder kilinikuuji laamu.[1]
Njawdi
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]eftere nde ina waɗi kelle 72, addani Wesley siftoreede e bannge yontaaji mum Richard Lovett e Jean Paul Marat, ko kanko woni piilaaɗo e kuutoragol safaara elektoronik, hay so tawii noon jarribooji Wesley e njeñtudi mum njiytiraaka ganndal e tolnooji hannde ɗii.[2]
Tuugnorgal
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]- ↑ Randy L. Maddox, Jason E. Vickers The Cambridge Companion to John Wesley 2009 Page 173 "One other characteristic of Wesley's engagement with the study of nature ... Wesley's embrace of this basic emphasis is evident in The Desideratum; or, Electricity Made Plain and Useful (1760). ...accounts of medical benefits of electrical shock. I Whereas some viewed these accounts with scorn, Wesley collected them and added accounts from his own experiments in public clinics with "electrifying machines." He then published them
- ↑ Linda S. Schwab, essay This Curious and Important Subject - John Wesley and The Desideratum, in Inward & Outward Health: John Wesley's Holistic Concept of Medical Science ed. Deborah Madden 2008, republished 2012 Page 169 ".. has elicited a wide range of evaluations from scholars of the last ... Discussion of its place (if any) in the history of medicine has been complicated and often compromised by a persistent and critical misunderstanding: that the only contemporary application of electricity in medicine is electroconvulsive therapy ."