Lecture Notes on Medical Physiology (Penerbit USM)

Lecture Notes on Medical Physiology (Penerbit USM)

Author: Rahimah Zakaria

Publisher: Penerbit USM

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 502

ISBN-13: 9674613307

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This book is a compilation of Human Physiology lecture notes meant specifically for undergraduate and postgraduate medical students as well as biomedical, nursing and other medical-related courses. The contributors of this book are the Universiti Sains Malaysia Physiology lecturers who have strived to present the information as accurately and effectively as possible. The contents are arranged according to body systems which comprise Cell and Tissue, Respiratory System, Cardiovascular System, Gastrointestinal System, Renal System, Nervous System, Endocrine System, Reproductive System and Musculoskeletal System. This book is designed with the following features to facilitate quick revision of relevant Physiology topics: • Compact, concise and readable text • Simplified tables • Colourful figures • Examples of short essay question It is hoped that this book will benefit the readers in one way or another. Happy reading!


The Hunterian Lectures in Comparative Anatomy, May and June 1837

The Hunterian Lectures in Comparative Anatomy, May and June 1837

Author: Richard Owen

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 1992-08-15

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 9780226641898

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Sir Richard Owen (1804-1892), comparative anatomist, colleague and later antagonist of Darwin, and head of the British Museum of Natural History, was a major figure in Victorian science. Yet historians of science have found Owen a difficult subject, in part because he chose not to expound his views in a major theoretical work but rather presented them through annual lectures at the Royal College of Surgeons from 1837 to 1856. Nevertheless, Owen's views on the nature of life, the relations of form and function, the meaning of fossils, and the development of species gave his contemporaries such as Lyell, Grant, Huxley, Whewell, and Darwin a set of positions with which they could agree or disagree while developing their own views. Now, for the first time, modern readers how access to the opening series of Owen's Hunterian Lectures, in which he set out the larger framework of the theoretical reflections that occupied him during the next nineteen years. Presented to the public in the two months before Darwin began his first notebook on the species question, these lectures reveal the nature of the synthesis of French, German, and British biology taking place in metropolitan London in this crucial period in nineteenth-century life science. Phillip Reid Sloan has transcribed and edited the seven surviving lectures and has written an introduction and commentary situating the work in the context of Owen's life and the scientific and intellectual life of the time. Sloan pays particular attention to Owen's early relations to the German scientific and philosophical tradition, and in this respect contributes to an understanding of the relations between science and British Romanticism. In the lectures, Owen surveys the history of comparative anatomy up to his time and develops his views on the nature of life, species duration, physiological function, and the relation between embryology and classification. One can see the degree to which transcendental anatomy and the views of Von Baer, Johannes Müller, E. G. St.-Hilaire, and Cuvier were current in London in the late 1830s. -- from back cover.