British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, 33. köideJ. Churchill., 1864 |
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Page 8
... means to an end . The latter , of course , implies the exercise of what in the frog must constitute the highest psychical faculties . All these matters are of a subjective character . We suppose that another man feels the same degree ...
... means to an end . The latter , of course , implies the exercise of what in the frog must constitute the highest psychical faculties . All these matters are of a subjective character . We suppose that another man feels the same degree ...
Page 11
... means arrests the conduction of sensation above or beyond the divided portion . Fodera , and afterwards Stilling and Van Deen , had noticed this fact in frogs , even after a considerable portion of the posterior column was removed ...
... means arrests the conduction of sensation above or beyond the divided portion . Fodera , and afterwards Stilling and Van Deen , had noticed this fact in frogs , even after a considerable portion of the posterior column was removed ...
Page 18
... means of curing ruptures , and preserving the efficiency of those whose maintenance and instruction has cost the country a large sum of money . This Again , rupture is not only a complaint which affects a large number of the community ...
... means of curing ruptures , and preserving the efficiency of those whose maintenance and instruction has cost the country a large sum of money . This Again , rupture is not only a complaint which affects a large number of the community ...
Page 19
... means of a truss . Here , then , is the disease that we have to deal with a complaint which is very common - which constitutes a serious disability , but which is not necessarily fatal , and which frequently admits of a palli- ative ...
... means of a truss . Here , then , is the disease that we have to deal with a complaint which is very common - which constitutes a serious disability , but which is not necessarily fatal , and which frequently admits of a palli- ative ...
Page 20
... means many triumphs have been already achieved , and among the most re- cent we may place the operation under consideration . The results which Mr. Wood has obtained are , on the whole , very favourable . He wisely abstains from making ...
... means many triumphs have been already achieved , and among the most re- cent we may place the operation under consideration . The results which Mr. Wood has obtained are , on the whole , very favourable . He wisely abstains from making ...
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Common terms and phrases
achorion acid action albumen animals appears arteries barracks Bazin bile blood body bones capsules cause caverns cells chloasma cinchona colour condition consequence cotyledons death death-rate depilation deposits dilatation disease doses duodenum effects emphysema epidermis erectile especially examination existence experiments fact favourable favus fever fibres flint fluid follicles fungus gall-stones gout gravel hair Hospital human India influence insane irritation L'Union Médicale lesion less Lisbon liver lungs maternal portion matter medicine medulla oblongata membrane ment mentagra Microsporon morbid mortality mucous mucous membrane muscles muscular nature nerves observed occur operation organs pain parasitic pathological patient peculiar period pityriasis porrigo portion present produced pruritus remains remarks removed Senhor Sir Charles Lyell skin spermatorrhoea spinal cord stomach substance surface surgeons symptoms syphilis Tinea Tinea favosa tion tissue tonsurans tracheotomy treatment trichophyton Trichosis troops tumour ulcer urine uterine milk vascular vessels whilst
Popular passages
Page 83 - This is a false alarm. The writings of Moses do not fix the antiquity of the globe. If they fix anything at all, it is only the antiquity of the species.
Page 84 - And there went a man of the house of Levi, and took to wife a daughter of Levi. And the woman conceived, and bare a son : and when she saw him that he was a goodly child, she hid him three months.
Page 83 - Genesis, and said to have been performed at the beginning; and those more detailed operations, the account of which commences at the second verse, and which are described to us as having been performed in so many days? Or, finally, does he ever make us to understand, that the genealogies of man went any farther than to fix the antiquity of the species, and, of consequence, that they left the antiquity of the globe a free subject for the speculations of philosophers?
Page 179 - India that we have so many languages from the north to the south, from the west to the east, each one of which, in its own way, has made...
Page 85 - Beyond that event we can never know how many centuries nor even how many chiliads of years may have elapsed since the first man of clay received the image of God and the breath of life.
Page 100 - O just and righteous opium! that to the chancery of dreams, summonest for the triumphs of despairing innocence, false witnesses, and confoundest perjury, and dost reverse the sentences of unrighteous judges; thou buildest upon the bosom of darkness, out of the fantastic imagery of the brain, cities and temples, beyond the art of Phidias and Praxiteles — beyond the splendours of Babylon and Hekatompylos; and from the "anarchy of dreaming sleep...
Page 94 - ... near the bottom. Such knives, considered apart from the associated mammalia, afford in themselves no safe criterion of antiquity, as they might belong to any part of the age of stone, similar tools being sometimes met with in tumuli posterior in date to the era of the introduction of bronze. But the anteriority of those at Brixham to the extinct animals is demonstrated not only by the occurrence at one point in overlying stalagmite of the bone of a cave-bear, but also by the discovery at the...
Page 25 - On the excito-secretory system of nerves, its relations to physiology and pathology. And on experimental researches in relation to the nutritive value and physiological effects of albumen, starch, and gum, when singly and exclusively used as food, for 1857.
Page 83 - It is not said when this beginning was. We know the general impression to be, that it was on the earlier part of the first day, and that the first act of creation formed part of the same day's work with the formation of light. We ask our readers to turn to that chapter, and to read the first five verses of it. Is there any forcing in the supposition, that the first verse describes the primary ac.t of creation, and leaves...
Page 83 - Or does he ever say, that there was not an interval of many ages betwixt the first act of creation, described in the first verse of the book of Genesis, and said to have been performed at the beginning; and those more detailed operations, the account of which commences at the second verse, and which are described to us as having been performed in so many days?