An Introduction to the Study of Experimental MedicineCourier Corporation, 17 okt. 2012 - 272 sidor Clear and penetrating presentation of the basic principles of scientific research from the great French physiologist whose contributions in the 19th century included the discovery of vasomotor nerves; nature of curare and other poisons in human body; functions of pancreatic juice in digestion; elucidation of glycogenic function of the liver. |
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Sida 5
... ourselves about the nature of things outside us. In the philosophic sense, observation shows, and experiment teaches. This first distinction will serve as our starting point in examining the different definitions of observation and ...
... ourselves about the nature of things outside us. In the philosophic sense, observation shows, and experiment teaches. This first distinction will serve as our starting point in examining the different definitions of observation and ...
Sida 11
... ourselves to investigation and to research, that we make attempts and trials in order to gain facts from which the mind, through reasoning, may draw knowledge or instruction. Speaking in the abstract, when we say “relying on observation ...
... ourselves to investigation and to research, that we make attempts and trials in order to gain facts from which the mind, through reasoning, may draw knowledge or instruction. Speaking in the abstract, when we say “relying on observation ...
Sida 15
... ourselves experiment and, in hospitals, amphitheatres, or laboratories, stir the fetid or throbbing ground of life. It has somewhere been said that true science is like a flowering and delectable plateau which can be attained only after ...
... ourselves experiment and, in hospitals, amphitheatres, or laboratories, stir the fetid or throbbing ground of life. It has somewhere been said that true science is like a flowering and delectable plateau which can be attained only after ...
Sida 19
... ourselves with reasoning on the facts observed. But if we admit that we must so limit ourselves, and if we posit as a principle that medicine is only a passive science of observation, then physicians should no more touch the human body ...
... ourselves with reasoning on the facts observed. But if we admit that we must so limit ourselves, and if we posit as a principle that medicine is only a passive science of observation, then physicians should no more touch the human body ...
Sida 20
... ourselves. We shall have recourse to experimentation perforce only when the observation to be induced is not already prepared in nature. But if an observation has already been made, either naturally or accidentally, or even by another ...
... ourselves. We shall have recourse to experimentation perforce only when the observation to be induced is not already prepared in nature. But if an observation has already been made, either naturally or accidentally, or even by another ...
Innehåll
1 | |
27 | |
PART | 59 |
ExPERIMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS PECULIAR To LIVING BEINGs | 87 |
PART THREE | 151 |
ExAMPLES OF ExPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGICAL CRITICISIM | 172 |
INVESTIGATION AND CRITICISM As APPLIED TO ExPERIMEN | 190 |
PHILosophic OBSTACLES ENCOUNTERED BY EXPERIMENTAL | 196 |
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An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine Claude Bernard Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1927 |
An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine Claude Bernard Begränsad förhandsgranskning - 1957 |
An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine Claude Bernard Begränsad förhandsgranskning - 1957 |
Vanliga ord och fraser
according action active analysis anatomy animals appearance applied become believe blood bodies cause changes Claude Bernard comparative complex consider criticism death deduction defined definite determinism discoveries disease doubt empirical environment error established example exist experiment experimental medicine experimental method experimental science explain express facts feeling follows force give idea illustrations important includes influence inner inorganic kind knowledge known later laws leads less living logical manifestations matter means mechanism merely mind nature necessarily necessary nerves never noted object observation opinion organism ourselves outer pathological phenomenon philosophic physicians physico-chemical physics physiology point of view possible practice present principle produced progress properties prove question reach reasoning relation scientific seek simple starting statistics sugar teach theory things tion true truth understand units vital phenomena whole wish