Daniel Noble
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Daniel Noble (1810 - 1885) was a Catholic physician. He is distinguished for his contributions to the study of mental illness and epidemic diseases.
[edit] Works
- An Essay of the Means, physical and moral, of estimating Human Character 1835
- Facts and Observationss relative to the influence of manufactures upon health and life 1843
- The Brain and its Physiology, a critical disquisition of the methods of determining relations subsisting between the structure and functions of the encephalon 1846
- Elements of Psychological Medicine: an Introduction to the practical study of Insanity 1853-1855
- Three Lectures on the Correlation of Psychology and Physiology 1854
- The Human Mind in its relations with the Brain and Nervous System 1858
- On certain popular fallacies concerning the production of epidemic diseases 1859
- On the fluctuations in the death-rate 1863
- Evanescent Protestantism and Nascent Atheism, the modern religious problem 1877
- On causes reducing the effects of sanitary reform 1878
- Mesmerism True—Mesmerism False
[edit] External links
This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.