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Trusting George Cheyne: Scientific Expertise, Common Sense, and Moral Authority in Early Eighteenth-Century Dietetic Medicine

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2003

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Johns Hopkins University Press
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Shapin, Steven. 2003. Trusting George Cheyne: Scientific expertise, common sense, and moral authority in early eighteenth-century dietetic medicine. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 77(2): 263-297.

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Abstract

Whenever physicians give directions to patients there is always a question of their authority to do so: what is it that they know, and who is it that they are, that gives them this authority? The problem is fully general, but it takes especially interesting forms in early modern dietetics, where patients were reckoned to possess much pertinent and reliable knowledge, and where medical dietetics occupied terrain already densely occupied by moral prudence. This article addresses these issues in relation to the writings and practice of George Cheyne (1671-1743), iatromechanist, dietary writer, and fashionable physician. Special attention is given to the relation between Cheyne's scientific expertise and the texture of the advice he gave to two patients, the printer and novelist Samuel Richardson and Selina, countess of Huntingdon.

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common sense, expertise, authority, physician-patient relations, dietetics

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Trusting George Cheyne: Scientific Expertise, Common… : DASH Story 2014-02-17
Hello, I am a senior undergraduate student writing my honours thesis in symbolism and food in the French Revolution, and found one of my sources here on the Harvard website. Thank you for the article, it's been very helpful in clarifying the role of Cheyne's thought in shaping dietetics of the 18th century!