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       Sophia Jex-Blake

      Medical Women

      Two Essays

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066152963

       I. Medicine as a Profession for Women. REPRINTED, WITH LARGE ADDITIONS, FROM “WOMAN’S WORK AND WOMAN’S CULTURE.”

       II. Medical Education of Women, THE SUBSTANCE OF A LECTURE DELIVERED ON APRIL 26TH, 1872, IN ST GEORGE’S HALL, LONDON, THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF SHAFTESBURY IN THE CHAIR.

       NOTES.

       NOTE A , p. 11 .

       NOTE B , p. 37 .

       NOTE C , p. 46 .

       NOTE D , p. 49 .

       NOTE E , p. 53 .

       NOTE F , p. 56 .

       NOTE G , p. 62 .

       NOTE H , p. 78 .

       NOTE I , p. 93 .

       NOTE J , p. 96 .

       NOTE K , p. 101 .

       NOTE L , p. 102 .

       NOTE M , p. 103 .

       NOTE N , p. 107 .

       NOTE O , p. 109 .

       NOTE P , p. 110 .

       NOTE Q , pp. 110, 120 .

       NOTE R , p. 111 ,

       NOTE S , p. 119 .

       NOTE T , p. 125 .

       NOTE U , p. 133 .

      I.

       Medicine as a Profession for Women.

       REPRINTED, WITH LARGE ADDITIONS,

       FROM “WOMAN’S WORK AND WOMAN’S CULTURE.”

       Table of Contents

      “We deny the right of any portion of the species to decide for another portion, or any individual for another individual, what is and what is not their ‘proper sphere.’ The proper sphere for all human beings is the largest and highest which they are able to attain to. What this is cannot be ascertained without complete liberty of choice.”—Mrs. J. S. Mill.

      MEDICINE AS A PROFESSION FOR WOMEN.

      “The universe shall henceforth speak for you

      And witness, She who did this thing, was born

      To do it; claims her license in her work.

      And so with more works. Whoso cures the plague,

      Though twice a woman, shall be called a leech.”

      “Aurora Leigh.”

      It is a very comfortable faith to hold that “whatever is, is best,” not only in the dispensations of Providence, but in the social order of daily life; but it is a faith which is perhaps best preserved by careful avoidance of too much inquiry into facts. The theory, if applied to past as well as to present times, would involve us in some startling contradictions, for there is hardly any act, habit, or custom which has not been held meritorious and commendable in one state of society, and detestable and evil in some other. If we believe that there are eternal principles of right and wrong, wisdom and equity, far above and greater than the “public opinion” of any one age or country, we must acknowledge the absolute obligation of inquiring, whenever matters of importance are at stake, on what grounds the popular opinions rest, and how far they are the result of habit, custom, and prejudice, or the real outgrowth of deep convictions and beliefs inherent in the most sacred recesses of human nature. While the latter command ever our deepest reverence, as the true “vox populi, vox Dei,” nothing can be more superficial, frivolous, and fallacious than the former.

      In a country where precedent has so much weight as in England, it doubly behoves us to make the distinction, and, while gratefully accepting the safeguard offered against inconsiderate and precipitate change, to beware that old custom is not suffered permanently to hide from our eyes any truth which may be struggling into the light. I suppose that no thinking man will pretend that the world has now reached the zenith of truth and knowledge, and that no further upward progress is possible; on the contrary, we must surely believe that each year will bring with it its new lesson; fresh lights will constantly be dawning above the horizon, and perhaps still oftener discoveries will be re-discovered, truths once acknowledged but gradually obscured or forgotten will emerge again into day, and a constantly recurring duty will lie before every one who believes in life as a responsible time of action, and not as a period of mere vegetative existence, to “prove all things, and hold fast that which is good.”

      The above considerations arise naturally in connexion with the subject of this paper, which is too often set aside by the general public, who, perhaps, hardly appreciate its scope, and are not yet fully aroused to the importance of the questions involved in the general issue. We are told so often that nature and custom have alike decided against the admission of women to the Medical Profession, and that there is in such admission something repugnant to the right order of things, that when we see growing evidences of a different opinion among a minority perhaps, but a minority which already includes many of our most earnest thinkers of both sexes, and increases daily, it surely becomes a duty for all who do not, in the quaint language of Sharpe, “have their thinking, like their washing, done out,” to test these statements by the above principles, and to see how far their truth is supported by evidence.

      In

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