Girish Mahajan (Editor)

David Meredith Reese

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Died
  
1861

Books
  
Humbugs of New-York: Being a Remonstrance Against Popular Delusion; Whether in Science, Philosophy, Or Religion

David Meredith Reese (1800-1861) was an American physician and skeptic.

Reese worked as a physician at the Bellevue Hospital until 1849. He was a skeptical of the many "isms" of his day. He had heavily criticized quackery in his book Humbugs of New York (1838). He was highly critical of phrenology.

Reese's book was published several years before Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (1841) and has been described as early debunking work.

Publications

  • Phrenology Known by Its Fruits (1836)
  • Humbugs of New-York: Being a Remonstrance Against Popular Delusion, Whether in Science, Philosophy, or Religion (1838)
  • Medical Lexicon of Modern Terminology (1848)
  • Elements of Zoology, Or, Natural History of Animals (1849)
  • References

    David Meredith Reese Wikipedia