The commemoration of surgical teachers
C. R. Hanlon
Warren and Clara Cole Foundation, Chicago, Ill., USA.
This address was given at a biennial meeting of the Michael E. DeBakey
International Surgical Society. Surgical teachers are commemorated by the
imitation of their pupils in accord with the human tendency to model
ourselves after our heroes. The modeling is not merely a search for
technical mastery but an emulation of virtues beyond the purely scientific.
The lecture addresses the nature of teachers and teaching, the role of
teachers as exemplars or heroes, the reasons why we commemorate certain
teachers, and finally, the personal recollection of virtues, such as
compassion, that make surgeons memorable for their pupils and patients.
Citations from Thomas Carlyle, Jacques Barzun, and William Bennett
illustrate the role of heroes, the nature of teaching, and the importance
of virtue. Lessons are drawn from the lives of John Hunter and William S.
Halsted, and from the work of the DeBakey family in surgery and in the
craft of medical writing.