nervous system, anatomical and physiological: in which the functions of various parts of the brain are for the first time assigned; and to which is prefixed some account of the author's earliest discoveries, of which the more recent doctrine of Bell, Magendie etc. is shewn to be at once a plagiarism, an inversion, and a blunder associated with useless experiments, which they ahve neither understood nor explained. Beinf the first volume of An Original System of Physiology, adapted to the advanced state of anatomy, by Alexander Walker, author of "Physiognomy founded on Physiology." 1834
TitleThe nervous system, anatomical and physiological: in which the functions of various parts of the brain are for the first time assigned; and to which is prefixed some account of the author's earliest discoveries, of which the more recent doctrine of Bell, Magendie etc. is shewn to be at once a plagiarism, an inversion, and a blunder associated with useless experiments, which they ahve neither understood nor explained. Beinf the first volume of An Original System of Physiology, adapted to the advanced state of anatomy, by Alexander Walker, author of "Physiognomy founded on Physiology." 1834
Author
Place of publicationLondon
PublisherSmith, Elder and Co.
Year of publication1834
Paginationxvi 704pp
MaterialBook
MaterialBook