Linked bibliography for the SEP article "Locke on Medicine" by Jonathan Craig Walmsley
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If everything goes well, this page should display the bibliography of the aforementioned article as it appears in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, but with links added to PhilPapers records and Google Scholar for your convenience. Some bibliographies are not going to be represented correctly or fully up to date. In general, bibliographies of recent works are going to be much better linked than bibliographies of primary literature and older works. Entries with PhilPapers records have links on their titles. A green link indicates that the item is available online at least partially.
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Primary Sources
- Boyle, Robert, 1660, New Experiments Physico-Mechanicall,
Touching the Spring of the Air and its Effects, Oxford: Printed
… for Tho. Robinson. (Scholar)
- –––, 1661, The Sceptical Chymist,
London: Printed for … J. Crooke. (Scholar)
- –––, 2001, The Correspondence of Robert
Boyle, Michael Hunter, Antonio Clericuzio, and Lawrence Principe
(eds), London/Burlington, VT: Pickering & Chatto. (Scholar)
- Le Clerc, Jean, 1705, “Eloge de feu Mr. Locke.”,
Bibliothèque Choisie, pour servir de suite à la
Bibliothèque Universelle, 6: 342–411. (Scholar)
- –––, 1713. The Life and Character of Mr.
Locke, London: printed for John Clarke, and E. Curll. A
translation of Le Clerc 1705. (Scholar)
- Locke, John, c. 1662a, “Vaccuum”, British Library,
shelfmark Additional MS 32554 folios 75r & 95r. (Scholar)
- –––, c. 1662b [2001], “Elasticus
Motus”, British Library, shelfmark Additional MS 32554 folios
70r–71v; transcription in Milton 2001: 221–2. (Scholar)
- –––, 1664–6 [2007], various notes on
respiration; page references are to the transcriptions printed in
Jonathan Walmsley, 2007, “John Locke on Respiration”,
Medical History, 51(4): 453–476.
doi:10.1017/S0025727300001769 (Scholar)
- –––, 1666a [2009], “Respirationis
Usus”, manuscript; transcribed and translated in Locke [RU]:
14–28. (Scholar)
- –––, 1666b [2000], “Morbus”. Page
references are to the transcription in Walmsley 2000:
390–393. (Scholar)
- –––, 1667, note on the Fracassati Experiment;
transcription in Locke [RU]: 8. (Scholar)
- –––, 1668 [2014], “Anatomia”,
manuscript. Folio references are to the transcription in Locke
[NT]. (Scholar)
- –––, 1669 [2014], “De Arte Medica”,
manuscript. Folio references are to the transcription in Locke
[NT]. (Scholar)
- –––, 1671–2 [1990], Drafts A and B of the
Essay concerning Human Understanding. Collected in Drafts
for the Essay Concerning Human Understanding, and Other Philosophical
Writings: In Three Volumes, Volume 1: Drafts A and B (The
Clarendon Edition of the Works of John Locke), Peter H. Nidditch and
G. A. J. Rogers (eds), Oxford: Clarendon, 1990.
doi:10.1093/actrade/9780198245452.book.1 (Scholar)
- –––, 1690 [1975], An Essay Concerning Humane Understanding, London: Eliz. Holt. Critical edition An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (The Clarendon Edition of the Works of John Locke), Peter H. Nidditch (ed.), Oxford: Clarendon Press. doi:10.1093/actrade/9780198243861.book.1 (Scholar)
- –––, 1690–1704, “Of the Conduct of
the Understanding” collected in The Posthumous Works of Mr.
John Locke, Peter King (ed.), London: Printed by W. B. for A. and
J. Churchill, 1706. (Scholar)
- –––, [RU] “John Locke’s ‘Respirationis Usus’: Text and Translation”, Jonathan C. Walmsley (ed./trans.), E. Meyer (trans.), in Eighteenth-Century Thought (Volume 4), James G. Buickerood (ed.), New York: AMS Press, 2009, 1–28. (Scholar)
- –––, [NT], “John Locke’s ‘Anatomia’ and ‘De Arte Medica’: New Transcriptions”, Jonathan Craig Walmsley (ed.), Medium.com, 2014. This is an update of a transcription in Walmsley’s thesis. [Locke [NT] available online] (Scholar)
- Lower, Richardo, 1669, Tractatus de Corde, London:
impensis Jacobi Allestry. (Scholar)
- Sennert, Daniel, 1611, Institutionum Medicinae,
Wittenberg: Apud Zacherium Schurerum. (Scholar)
- Sydenham, Thomas, 1666 & 1668 [1987], Methodus Curandi
Febres, London: Impensis J. Crook, second edition 1668. Reprinted
and translated in Methodus Curandi Febres Propriis Observationibus
Superstructura [i.e. Superstructa]: The Latin Text of the 1666 and
1668 Editions with English Translation from R. G. Latham (1848),
Geoffrey Guy Meynell (ed.). Robert Gordon Latham (trans.), Folkestone:
Winterdown books, 1987. (Scholar)
- –––, 1667–74 [1991], Medical
Observations, manuscript; collected in Thomas
Sydenham’s “Observationes Medicae” (London, 1676)
and his “Medical Observations” (Manuscript 572 of the
Royal College of Physicians of London); with new transcripts of
related Locke MSS, in the Bodleian Library, G. G. Meynell (ed.),
Folkestone: Winterdown, 1991. (Scholar)
- –––, 1676 [1848], Observationes
Medicae, London: Kettilby. Page references are to Sydenham
1848–50. (Scholar)
- –––, 1848–50, The
Works of Thomas Sydenham, M.D. Ranslated from the Latin Edition of Dr.
Greenhill, with a Life of the Author, by R.G. Latham, R. G.
Latham (ed.), 2 volumes, London: Printed for the Sydenham
Society.
- Tyrrell, James, 1718–19 [2021], his memoir of Locke. Printed
in Felix Waldmann, 2021, “John Locke as a Reader of Thomas
Hobbes’s Leviathan : A New Manuscript”, The
Journal of Modern History, 93(2): 245–282.
doi:10.1086/714068 (Scholar)
- Willis, Thomas, c. 1662 [1980], “Lectures”. Printed in
Kenneth Dewhurst (ed./trans.), Thomas Willis’s Oxford
Lectures, Oxford: Sandford publications, 1980. (Scholar)
- Wood, Anthony, c. 1672 [1891–95], his diary, Bodleian
Library, MS Tanner 102, part 1. Printed in Anthony Wood, The Life
and Times of Anthony Wood, Antiquary of Oxford, 1632–1695,
Andrew Clark (ed.), 4 volumes, Oxford: Printed for the Oxford
Historical Society at the Clarendon Press, 1891–95. (Scholar)
Secondary sources
- Anstey, Peter R., 2011a, “The Creation of the English Hippocrates”, Medical History, 55(4): 457–478. doi:10.1017/s0025727300004944 (Scholar)
- –––, 2011b, John Locke and Natural Philosophy, Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199589777.001.0001 (Scholar)
- –––, 2015, “Further Reflections on
Locke’s Medical Remains”, Locke Studies, 15:
215–242. doi:10.5206/ls.2015.696 (Scholar)
- –––, 2019, “Robert Boyle and the Intelligibility of the Corpuscular Philosophy”, in Experiment, Speculation and Religion in Early Modern Philosophy, Alberto Vanzo and Peter R. Anstey (eds), New York: Routledge, 36–57 (ch. 2). (Scholar)
- Anstey, Peter and John Burrows, 2009, “John Locke, Thomas Sydenham, and the Authorship of Two Medical Essays”, Electronic British Library Journal, article 3: 42 pages. doi:10.23636/953 (Scholar)
- Bates, Donald G., 1975, “Thomas Sydenham: The Development of
His Thought, 1666–1676”, Ph.D. thesis, Johns Hopkins
University. (Scholar)
- Burrows, John and Peter Anstey, 2013, “John Locke, Thomas
Sydenham, and the ‘Smallpox Manuscripts’”, in
Discovering, Identifying and Editing Early Modern Manuscripts
(English Manuscript Studies, 1100–1700 18), Peter Beal (ed.),
London: British Library, 180–214. (Scholar)
- Dewhurst, Kenneth, 1963, John Locke, 1632–1704, Physician and Philosopher: A Medical Biography with an Edition of the Medical Notes in his Journals (Publications of the Wellcome Historical Medical Library, New Ser 2), London: Wellcome Historical Medical Library. (Scholar)
- Frank, Robert Gregg, 1980, Harvey and the Oxford
Physiologists: A Study of Scientific Ideas, Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press. (Scholar)
- Meynell, Guy, 1993, “Sydenham, Locke and Sydenham’s
De peste sive febre pestilentiali”, Medical
History, 37(3): 330–332. doi:10.1017/S0025727300058488 (Scholar)
- –––, 1995, “Locke, Boyle and Peter
Stahl”, Notes and Records of the Royal Society of
London, 49(2): 185–192. doi:10.1098/rsnr.1995.0022 (Scholar)
- Milton, John R., 1994, “Locke at Oxford”, in Locke’s Philosophy: Content and Context, G. A. J. Rogers (ed.), Oxford/New York: Clarendon Press, 29–48 (ch. 1). doi:10.1093/oso/9780198240761.003.0002 (Scholar)
- –––, 2001, “Locke, Medicine and the Mechanical Philosophy”, British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 9(2): 221–243. doi:10.1080/09608780110045245 (Scholar)
- Newman, William R., 1996, “The Alchemical Sources of Robert Boyle’s Corpuscular Philosophy”, Annals of Science, 53(6): 567–585. doi:10.1080/00033799600200401 (Scholar)
- Pagel, Walter, 1982, Joan Baptista van Helmont: Reformer of Science and Medicine (Cambridge Monographs on the History of Medicine), Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Romanell, Patrick, 1984, John Locke and Medicine: A New Key to Locke, Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books. (Scholar)
- Walmsley, Jonathan Craig, 2000, “Morbus-Locke’s Early
Essay On Disease”, Early Science and Medicine, 5(4):
367–393. doi:10.1163/157338200x00353 (Scholar)
- –––, 2012, “Review Article: Anstey, John Locke and Natural Philosophy”, Locke Studies, 12: 243–284, (Scholar)
- –––, 2016, “Peter Anstey on Locke’s
Natural Philosophy”, Locke Studies, 16: 167–194.
doi:10.5206/ls.2016.657 (Scholar)
- Walmsley, Jonathan Craig and John R. Milton, 1999,
“Locke’s Notebook ‘Adversaria 4’ and His Early
Training in Chemistry”, The Locke Newsletter, 30:
85–191. (Scholar)