CLASS SHOULD BE CONSIDERED COMPETENT FOR, THEIR DUTIES TILL THEY HAVE GIVEN PROOF OF POSSESSING A GENERAL KNOWLEDGE OF THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTIONS OF THE HUMAN BODY, AND OF THE LAWS OF HEALTH. Were proof required of all teachers that they possessed such... Transactions - Página 290por Eclectic Medical Society of the State of New York - 1878Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1882 - 504 páginas
...are content to remain — and to allow their children to remain — in the most thorough ignorance of the structure and functions of the human body, and of the means by which it may bo maintained in health. This, indeed, is the greatest difficulty with which... | |
| Princeton University - 1889 - 596 páginas
...Biology. The required course in Biology la designed to give all academic students a general knowledge of the structure and functions of the human body and of the principles of Zoology and Botany ; these subjects are required studies of the Freshman and Sophomore... | |
| Sir Edwin Ray Lankester - 1890 - 414 páginas
...universities. Owing to the connection of medicine with these seats of learning, it was natural that the study of the structure and functions of the human body and of the animals nearest to man should take root there ; the spirit of inquiry which now for the first time... | |
| Robert Brudenell Carter - 1903 - 336 páginas
...it. The aim of medicine, using the word in its widest sense, is to arrive at a complete understanding of the structure and functions of the human body, and of the various ways and degrees in which they are related to or dependent upon one another, as well as of the circumstances... | |
| 1904 - 760 páginas
...facilities ottered in these laboratories, workers have not only enormously increased our knowledge of the structure and functions of the human body and of the nature of disease, but have provided methods which have already robbed some of the most direful pestilences... | |
| University of Texas - 1914 - 166 páginas
...GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE. The object of this course is to give the student a general knowledge of the structure and functions of the human body, and of the care of its parts. The work will be arranged so as to be equivalent to, but not identical with, one-third... | |
| Benoy Kumar Sarkar - 1914 - 408 páginas
...universities. Owing to the connexion of medicine with these seats of learning it was natural that the study of the structure and functions of the human body and of the animals nearest to men should take root there. * * * The influence of the great academies of the 171)1... | |
| 1904 - 622 páginas
...facilities offered in these laboratories, workers have not only enormously increased our knowledge of the structure and functions of the human body, and of the nature of disease, but have also provided methods which have already robbed some of the most direful... | |
| University of Texas - 1907 - 934 páginas
...hours of laboratory work a week. No other course is prerequisite. This presents a general knowledge of the structure and functions of the human body, and of the care of its parts. Text: Hough and Sedgwick's The Human Mechanism. Laboratory fee, $3. Miss RUCKER... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - 1924 - 914 páginas
...of his views. He has successfully shown that not an inconsiderable part of our present-day knowledge of the structure and functions of the human body and of the nature and methods of treatment of surgical diseases were known to the ancient physicians of India.... | |
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