THE place of physiology and hygiene in general education has yet to be effectively established. Intellectual assent has been generally accorded to Herbert Spencer's dictum—that such a course of ...
IT is apparently the notion in certain educational circles that hygiene can be taught without a preliminary knowledge of the science physiology on which it is founded. If such an idea still lingers ...
IN President's Eliot's last Annual Report the improved health of the students within the last twenty years is ascribed to the greater attention given in intelligent families to the care of the body.
fisherman's child, a long and learned list of bones found in the human body. Even for a medical student the list, as such, apart from the physiology and surgery of the bones, would have been of small ...
An address given before the American Society of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis at the Academy of Medicine, New York, Dec. 13, 1906.
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