 | 1813 - 554 pages
...rejects it. He watches the operation of remedies, both immediate and remote; compares their effects in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times; and in every thing acts with unaffected modesty, under the guidance of nature, feeling, and common sense.... | |
 | 1813 - 558 pages
...rejects it. He watches the operation of remedies, both immediate and remote ; compares their effects in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times ; and in every thing acts with unaffected modesty, under the guidance of nature, feeling, and common sense.... | |
 | 1832 - 512 pages
...him, is sufficiently obvious. The strength of the various motives, which influence human conduct, vary in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times and circumstances. In no case, whatever the nature, however 1832.] Incompetency of Parties as Witnestes.... | |
 | John Bostock - 1836 - 924 pages
...and of the quantity of blood which is expelled by each contraction. This quantity of course varies in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times, and there are practical difficulties which prevent us from arriving at complete certainty on these points.... | |
 | Sylvester Graham - 1849 - 302 pages
...never found, except as the effect of disease. The quantity of this oily matter or fat in the human body varies greatly in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times (17"), *n some instances it constitutes a very considerable proportion of the bulk and weight of the... | |
 | 1854 - 780 pages
...signify some unknown change. There is good reason to suppose that this impression may vary in degree in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times ; and thence some practical inferences are to be drawn which have not yet been well advanced into popular... | |
 | John Appleton - 1860 - 298 pages
...him, is sufficiently obvious. The strength of the various motives, which influence human conduct, vary in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times and circumstances. In no case, whatever their nature, however sinister their direction, is there any certainty... | |
 | George Smith, William Makepeace Thackeray - 1878 - 838 pages
...the feelings with which we contemplate the termination of our own earthly life must vary indefinitely in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times ; and it would be a matter of deep interest to compare our respective experience if we could bring ourselves... | |
 | Peter Lund Simmonds - 1865 - 588 pages
...fatty matters. Any milk leaving no more than twenty-seven must have been tampered with. Dr. Voelcker suggests the employment of a hydrometer as a means...but without detailing these variations, which would occupy far more time than the limits of a lecture would permit, allow me to call your attention to... | |
 | Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London - 1875 - 500 pages
...that we should expect, a priori, very considerable variation to occur in the total volume of urine in different individuals, and in the same individual at different times, and this we find to be the case in the observations made, and, until we are able, which at present we are... | |
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