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Brunonian
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Brunonian
Brunonian or Brunonians usually refer to alumni of Brown University and Pembroke College in Brown University. The terms may also refer to:
The Brunonian, a predecessor and rival newspaper of The Brown Daily Herald
Brunonian system of medicine
Brunonids, a Saxon
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Brunonian
Brunonian, a. Med. (bruːˈnəʊnɪən) [f. Bruno, Brunōn-em, a Latinized form of the name Brown.] Applied to the system or theory of medicine founded by Dr. John Brown (1735–1788), according to which physical life consists in a peculiar excitability, the normal excitement produced by all the agents which...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Brunonian system of medicine
Coleridge then discusses the Brunonian system in lengthy notebook entries from his time in Göttingen. Röschlaub developed an Erregbarkeitstheorie (excitability theory) essentially on Brunonian principles.
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Brownist
ˈBrownist [f. as prec. (senses 1, 3) + -ist.] 1. An adherent or follower of the ecclesiastical principles of Robert Brown. (See prec.)1583 Stubbes Anat. Abus. ii. 74 Diuers new phangled felows sprong vp of late, as the Brownists. 1602 Warner Alb. Eng. ix. xlvi. 219 The Brownist and the Barrowist, go...
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Brown (physician, born 1735)
John Brown (173517 October 1788) was a Scottish physician and the creator of the Brunonian system of medicine. The stimulation was seen as excitability; hence the relation of Brunonian medicine and excitants.
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Brownism
ˈBrownism [f. the surname Brown, Browne.] 1. The system of church-government advocated c 1581 by Robert Brown, an English Puritan and Nonconformist. His principles, somewhat modified, became those of the Independents.a 1617 Hieron Wks. II. 497 Some fall to Brownisme, some to Popery. 1642 Compl. to H...
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Gertrude the Elder of Brunswick
From then on, Gertrud took care of the education of their common, underage sons, trying to cultivate and strengthen the Brunonian family traditions. 39
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excitability
excitability (ɛkˌsaɪtəˈbɪlɪtɪ) [f. next: see -ity. Cf. Fr. excitabilité.] 1. The quality of being excitable, liability or tendency to excitement; in pl. excitable feelings.a 1803 Foster in Life & Corr. (1846) I. 187 Excitement is excitability too. 1840 Carlyle Heroes (1858) 250, I fancy, the rigorou...
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Francesco Canaveri
He was a tenacious opponent of the doctrines of Cullen and Brown, who espoused the so-called Brunonian theory of medicine, which regarded disorders as
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Johann Stieglitz
Known for his criticism of perceived "heresies of medicine", he was a vigorous opponent of speculative medical theories that included mesmerism and the Brunonian
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Andreas Röschlaub
He then further advanced Brown's ideas on graduation, making Germany the main centre for the implementation of the Brunonian system of medicine. The nature of Schelling's influence in German culture was such as to further promote the Brunonian system, as presented by Röschlaub.
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William W. Crapo
visited Brown University, on which date he is credited with initiating 17 members of the provisional chapter there, re-activating the ten-years-dormant Brunonian
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Joseph Frank (physician)
Work
He was one of the more influential advocates of the Brunonian system of physic, and published "Grundriss der Pathologie nach den Gesetzen der Erregungstheorie
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Thomas Garnett (physician)
John Brown, and he became a disciple of the Brunonian theory.
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Alpha Delta Phi Society
In March 1975, the Brunonian chapter elected the first female president in the fraternity's history. This proposal convinced the Brunonian chapter to delay its disassociation by another year.
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