| Chemistry - 1811 - 544 pages
...under these circumstances respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will still continue. 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated ; notwithstanding (lie functions of respiration, and the... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - Mathematics - 1811 - 462 pages
...under these circumstances respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will still continue. 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated ; notwithstanding the functions of respiration, and the... | |
| William Nicholson - Science - 1811 - 866 pages
...under these circumstances respiration is arficlally produced, the circulation will still continue. 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and uo heat is generated; notwithstanding the functions of respiration and the circulation... | |
| John Ware - Medicine - 1812 - 458 pages
...under these circumstances respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will still continue. 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated ; notwithstanding the functions of respiration and the circulation... | |
| English literature - 1812 - 708 pages
...say, therefore, that the circulation is but partially dependent upon the brain. But to proceed. * 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated ; notwithstanding the functions of respiration, and the... | |
| Medicine - 1812 - 564 pages
...these circumstances, respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will still continue. " 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated; notwithstanding the functions of respiration, and the circulation... | |
| Thomas Thomson - Agriculture - 1813 - 530 pages
...under these circumstances, respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will ttill continue. 3. That when the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated ; notwithstanding the functions of respiration, and the... | |
| Thomas Thomson - Agriculture - 1813 - 514 pages
...under these circumstances, respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will Still continue. 3. That when the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated; notwithstanding the functions of respiration, and the circulation... | |
| Natural history - 1813 - 524 pages
...these circumstances respiration is artificially produced, the circulation will still continue. " 3. When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated; notwithstanding the functions of respiration and the circulation... | |
| John Read (maker to the army.) - 1825 - 572 pages
...&c., which prove that animal heat is intimately connected with the development of nervous energy. " When the influence of the brain is cut off, the secretion of urine appears to cease, and no heat is generated, notwithstanding the function of respiration and the circulation... | |
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