I have purposely abstained in the foregoing remarks from invading the province of the physician or the physiologist by discussing the influence of bad drainage on the health of those living subject to it.
A distinguished American physiologist has lately come forward in defense of the French experimenter, Magendie, and, parenthetically, of his methods of investigation in the study of vital phenomena.
The most eminent physiologist in this country, Doctor Austin Flint, Jr.
It was probably in reference to this experiment that Sir Charles Bell, the greatest English physiologist of our century, writing to his brother in 1822, informs him that he hesitates to go on with his investigations.
It is, however, a physiologist who is speaking, therefore no one will be surprised that he should defend a practice which is at the basis of the science he teaches.
It is with no light-heartedness that the physiologist causes the blood to flow, inoculates disease, injects poisons.
Just as the doctor as he grows older becomes more and more sensitive to the sight of human suffering, so the physiologist who has performed many experiments understands more and more thoroughly the seriousness of pain.
But the author simply forgets this fact, that there is not at this present moment one single honourable physiologist who would consent to perform long and distressing experiments on an animal not under anaesthetics.
The physiologist is not an ignoramus, neither is he a barbarian; and he has right well understood this duty.
But I would leave the physiologist to be the judge in the matter.
It seems to me that these formal declarations might be accepted by every physiologist as well as by every anti-vivisectionist.
For all this time the physiologist has been working.
The profoundest achievement of the physiologist will be the change his teachings and discoveries will bring about in man's attitude toward himself.
To the physiologist and the psychologist, the feeling of insufficiency is the disease, no matter how spectacular the overlaying phenomena--a cripple on crutches or a man blind and speechless.
But as every physiologistsince has acknowledged, he was and remains the great path-breaker in the conquest of the internal secretions.
Gall, thephysiologist who popularized ideas concerning the meaning of the protuberances and depressions of the head in relation to faculty and character, early in the nineteenth century, was the first to prove this.
In the preface to his work he had spoken more confidently of the fact that Nature, as an experimenter and a vivisector, can beat the physiologist to a frazzle.
Thanks to the investigations of physiologist and psychologist, usually combined in the person of a physician, "nervousness" has been found to be not an organic disease but a functional one.
For the physiologist this perfection of the compound microscope had the same significance that the, discovery of America had for the fifteenth-century geographers--it promised a veritable world of utterly novel revelations.
Fifty years ago, every physiologist taught that the liberal consumption of meat was essential.
No respectable physiologist will support this claim today, although half a century ago all physiologists held these now obsolete views.
Much remains for the chemist and physicist and physiologistto reveal, and no more fascinating field of research exists.
Donders, and for his aid in persuading this great physiologist to undertake the investigation of the present subject.
The persons to whom I refer were the eminentphysiologist Bichat, and the great naturalist Lamarck, in France; and a distinguished German, Treviranus.
The physiologistagain must needs possess an acquaintance with physics and chemistry, inasmuch as physiology is, to a great extent, applied physics and chemistry.
God says it did; the physiologist says that it did not; we 389 can not hesitate whom to believe.
The physiologist will step in and speak to you of the structure of the eye--the susceptibility of its retina for special impressions; there he says you may find colour.
Put both accounts together, and they appear as part-causes, each a factor helping to make up a result; which result physicist and physiologist would agree to call colour.
Indeed, the American physiologist Jennings did not hesitate to defend such a view most strongly, and many others seem to be inclined to do the same.
It was the great operating physiologist Sherrington who exclaimed after a visit to Pavlov that at last he understood the psychology of the martyrs.
Physiologist and Pathologist, and Assistant Chief of Bureau, Albert F.
True, Physiologist in Charge of Poisonous-Plant Investigations, and to recommend that it be published as Bulletin No.
Physiologist and Pathologist, and Chief of Bureau, Beverly T.
To support his theory, this physiologist had recourse to various curious experiments on dogs, whom he fed with substances which contained no nitrogen.
This physiologist having wrapped up a male frog in oil-silk, fecundation could not take place; but having collected on the point of a camel-hair pencil a particle of the fecundising fluid, he succeeded in vivifying thousands of eggs.
The man who brings forth chickens from the incubation of eggs, instead of eating them; the physiologist who rots a piece of meat to develop myriads of living beings in the putrid nidus, might just as well be called an atheist.
The same physiologist discovered animalcules in the pus of certain ulcers not dissimilar in appearance to the vibrio lineola of Mueller.
But it is significant that it was a morphologist and not a physiologist that did the first spade-work.
Reichert, in his Bericht, applied to the rather wild theorisings of the physiologist Ludwig the same clear commonsense criticism that he bestowed on the other "atomists.
It is for the physiologist to say whether any difference can be traced in their several skulls; for all practical purposes, historical or political, all distinction between these several classes has passed away.
It may then so happen that the cry for help goes up and is answered on a ground of kindred which in the eye of the physiologist has no existence.
It is only the physiologist who could deny his right to his new position.
And it does its work none the less because in some cases the feeling of sympathy is awakened by a claim of kindred, where, in the sense of the physiologist or the genealogist, there is no kindred at all.
If there be any intellectual difference between man and woman, it must, at any rate, be very slight, a physiologist like Stuart Mill having declared that he failed to find the difference.
More strikingly no physician or physiologist can describe the necessity for the satisfaction of the craving for love on the part of a healthy being,--a craving that finds its expression in sexual intercourse.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "physiologist" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: biologist; botanist; naturalist; zoologist