An Introduction to the Study of Experimental MedicineSchuman, 1949 - 226 sidor |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-3 av 50
Sida 106
... necessarily related to physiology . The anatomical point of view differs , however , from the physiological in this , that anatomists wish to explain anatomy by physiology , while physiologists seek to explain physiology by anatomy ...
... necessarily related to physiology . The anatomical point of view differs , however , from the physiological in this , that anatomists wish to explain anatomy by physiology , while physiologists seek to explain physiology by anatomy ...
Sida 146
... necessarily begins with clinics , since they determine and define the object of medicine , i.e. , the medical problem ; but while they are the physician's first study , clinics are not the foundation of scientific medicine ; physiology ...
... necessarily begins with clinics , since they determine and define the object of medicine , i.e. , the medical problem ; but while they are the physician's first study , clinics are not the foundation of scientific medicine ; physiology ...
Sida 190
... necessarily , he saw them by chance ; then he came to conceive ideas about things , to compare old facts and to deduce from them new ones ; in a word , after empirical observation , he was no longer led to find other facts by chance ...
... necessarily , he saw them by chance ; then he came to conceive ideas about things , to compare old facts and to deduce from them new ones ; in a word , after empirical observation , he was no longer led to find other facts by chance ...
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
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 - 2012 |
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 hand hypothesis idea important influence inner inorganic kind knowledge known later laws leads less limit living logical manifestations matter means mechanism merely mind nature necessarily necessary nerve 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 sense simply starting sugar teach theory things tion true truth understand units vital phenomena whole wish