Experiments on animalsT. Fisher Unwin, 1900 - 274 pages |
Common terms and phrases
action anæsthetics anatomy anthrax antitoxin arteries bacillus bacteriology bitten blood body bone cattle cent cerebellum Certificate charbon chloroform cholera Claude Bernard cord course court of summary curare deaths diabetes died of rabies digestion diphtheria discovery dose Erasistratus experimental experiments on animals facts fever fluid Galen gastric juice gland Haffkine's Harvey Hospital Hubli immunised India inoculated July killed Lancet license living animals maladie malaria medicine ments method microbe micrococci mortality mosquitoes myxedema nerves nervous system non-inoculated number of experiments observed offence operation opinion organ outbreak pain pancreas paralysis parasite Pasteur Institute pathology patients performed periosteum person physiology plague present proved published rabbits rabid rabies Réaumur Royal Secretary serum sheep Sir Charles Bell spinal stomach summary jurisdiction surgery tetanus thing tion tissues total number treated treatment tuberculosis tuberculous typhoid vaccination Valisnieri vaso-motor veins venom vessels veterinary surgeons virulence virus wounds Zoophilist
Popular passages
Page 221 - The experiment must be performed with a view to onanimalsthe advancement by new discovery of physiological knowledge or of knowledge which will be useful for saving or prolonging life or alleviating suffering...
Page 229 - ... conditioned personally to appear at the said sessions, and to try such appeal and to abide the judgment of the court thereupon, and to pay such costs as shall be by the court awarded...
Page 44 - Experiments have never been the means of discovery ; and a survey of what has been attempted of late years in physiology will prove that the opening of living animals has done more to perpetuate error than to confirm the just views taken from the study of anatomy and natural motions.
Page 227 - means the Act of the session of the eleventh and twelfth years of the reign of her present Majesty, chapter forty-three, intituled, " An Act to facilitate the performance of the duties of justices of the peace out of sessions within England and Wales with respect to summary convictions and orders," inclusive of any Acts amending the same.
Page 221 - ... be liable, at the discretion of the court by which he is tried, to a penalty not exceeding one hundred pounds or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding three months.
Page 229 - ... court of summary jurisdiction, or remit the matter to the court of summary jurisdiction with the opinion of the court of appeal thereon, or make such other order in the matter as the court thinks just...
Page 229 - ... (2.) The appellant shall, within seven days after the cause of appeal has arisen, give notice to the other party and to the court of summary jurisdiction of his intention to appeal, and of the ground thereof...
Page 228 - Jurisdiction, when hearing and determining an information or complaint, in respect of any offence under this Act, shall be constituted either of two or more Justices of the Peace in Petty Sessions sitting at a place appointed for holding Petty Sessions, or of some magistrate or officer sitting alone or with others at some Court or other place appointed for the administration of justice, and for the time being empowered by Law to do alone any act authorised to be done by more than one Justice of the...
Page 226 - ... and also (unless the applicant be a professor of physiology, medicine, anatomy, medical jurisprudence, materia medica, or surgery in a university in Great Britain or Ireland or in University College, London, or in a college in Great Britain or Ireland, incorporated by royal charter) by a professor of physiology, medicine, anatomy, medical jurisprudence, materia medica, or surgery in a university in Great Britain or Ireland, or in University College, London, or in a college in Great Britain or...
Page 10 - I remember that when I asked our famous Harvey, in the only discourse I had with him, which was but a little while before he died, what were the things which induced him to think of a circulation of the blood, he answered me, that when he took notice that the valves in the veins of so many parts of the body were so placed that they gave free passage to the blood towards the heart, but opposed the passage of the...