Article ID: CBB001320601

Cure or Protection? the Meaning of Smallpox Inoculation, ca. 1750--1775 (2013)

unapi

The idea that smallpox could be eradicated was not necessarily the ultimate aim when inoculation was introduced in Europe in the 1720s. This potentiality was not clearly articulated as an aim until the end of the eighteenth century. This article argues that during most of the eighteenth century, the main aim of inoculation was to lead people as safely as possible through what was regarded as an unavoidable disease. Inoculation became safer, simpler and less expensive from the 1760s, but the changing ideas about its potentiality had more complex roots. A new understanding was produced through an introduced in Europe in the 1720s. This potentiality was not clearly articulated as an aim until the end of the eighteenth century. This article argues that during most of the eighteenth century, the main aim of inoculation was to lead people as safely as possible through what was regarded as an unavoidable disease. Inoculation became safer, simpler and less expensive from the 1760s, but the changing ideas about its potentiality had more complex roots. A new understanding was produced through an interaction between inoculation practice, more general medical theory and developments within probabilistic thinking and political arithmetic. The first part of the article explores how smallpox inoculation was incorporated into existing medical thinking based on traditional humoral pathology. Inoculation was a new technology, but as it was perceived in the early eighteenth century, the innovation did not first and foremost concern the medical principles of the treatment. The second part of the article investigates arguments about why and when to inoculate: what kind of remedy was inoculation for eighteenth-century agents? The article concludes with a discussion on changes emerging towards the end of the century, and relates them to developments during the preceding decades rather than seeing them as inspired precursors of events and ideas to come.

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Authors & Contributors
Meyer, Victoria Nicole
Penschow, Jennifer D.
Helen Esfandiary
Gelati, Giacomo
Sannicandro, Lisa
Serge Boarini
Journals
British Journal for the History of Science
Atti e Memorie, Rivista di Storia della Farmacia
Ziran Kexueshi Yanjiu (Studies in the History of Natural Sciences)
Science in Context
Revue d'Histoire des Sciences
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Publishers
Ohio State University
Tinta da China
Mimesis
Manchester University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
CreateSpace
Concepts
Smallpox
Inoculation
Medicine
Vaccines; vaccination
Prevention and control of disease
Public health
People
Sarmento, Jacob de Castro
Montagu, Mary Wortley, Lady
Jenner, Edward
Galen
Bernoulli, Daniel
Alembert, Jean le Rond d'
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
19th century
Ming dynasty (China, 1368-1644)
Medieval
16th century
Places
Europe
England
Boston (Massachusetts, U.S.)
United States
Italy
France
Institutions
Royal Society of London
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