Consummatum est.- has ended. Fostas announced these words with a drama with the same name long before his work actually ended. why? In his opinion, his role was completed. Fate is now the master of his life, and despite the overwhelming evidence of opposition, he stubbornly asserts that he can not change what he believes is destiny. In his typical fashion, Marlow explores his highly controversial subjects for his contemporary audience at Dr. Faust, his theater. The idea that Calvinism's prescribed doctrine, or the idea that God chose a person to be saved, gained a substantial foundation in the UK during the Elizabethan era, especially in the A Puritan movement.
Both Hamlet and Fatas started playing a role in the moral dilemma of making good and evil decisions. Both plots have a supernatural side, and Hamlet is a ghost and an angel of Faustian. Faust has been thinking about ways to practice black magic; he will try to make a decision between goodwill / moral and evil / black magic. He received an evil angel interview to persuade him to continue black magic. Faustus contacted Mephistopheles. And he is convinced that hell is a wonderful place. Mephistopheles went further and tried to warn Faust that infinite black magical wisdom was not worth giving up heaven. "Why, this is hell, not mine, I think about you, I will look at the face of God, taste the pleasure of everlasting heaven, not suffer from 10,000 hells, take away eternal happiness "In 1905, the first act, Scene 5)? Faust did not pay attention to the warning, but he only saw the power he would have.
Dr. Bernard Fathus criticized Aloe, Strychnine and Belladonna in the form of a pill in a paper by the Chicago branch of the American Pharmaceutical Association. He pointed out that because the speed and duration of the three agents are different, it is impossible for them to act together. Aloe vera takes very late, it takes 10 to 12 hours. On the other hand, strychnine and atropine were quickly absorbed with a short time action. Aloe was hired by ancient people and was known as a producer of Socotra in the 4th century B.C. This medicine was used by Dioscorides, Celsus, Pliny, and later Greek, Arab physicians, but Hippocrates and Theophrastus did not mention it.
Ancient Greeks also explained about it. About 460 BC, Hippocrates decided that the most common diseases of his time are phobias or consumption. This is almost always fatal. Therefore, he advises his followers and students not to deal with slow consumption so as not to hurt their reputation. After that Franciscus de Bo Sylvius explained the progress of this disease in 1679 Opera Medica. Twenty years later, the Public Health Act of the Republic of Lucca of Italy acknowledged the contagiousity of this epidemic. "Since then the remaining items after consumer death should no longer risk the health." Disinfection measures "