| John James Drysdale - 1870 - 152 páginas
...this word, Schwann says, respecting the formation of cells, " Those phenomena may be arranged into two natural groups : first, those which relate to...secondly, those which result from chemical changes cither in the component parts of the cell itself, or in the surrounding cytoblasrelation to ordinary... | |
| John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell - 1871 - 844 páginas
...this word, Schwiinn says, respecting the formation of cells, " Those phenomena may be arranged into two natural groups : first, those which relate to...result from chemical changes either in the component parts of the cell itself, or in the surrounding cytoblastema, and which may be called metabolic phenomena... | |
| John Theodore Merz - 1912 - 848 páginas
...follows ('Sydenham Society's Translation,' p. 193): "The phenomena attending the formation of cells may be arranged in two natural groups : first, those...which may be denominated the plastic phenomena of the cell ; secondly, those which result from chemical changes, either in the component particles of the... | |
| John Theodore Merz - 1903 - 832 páginas
...follows (' Sydenham Society's Translation,' p. 193): "The phenomena attending the formation of cells may be arranged in two natural groups : first, those...of the molecules to form a cell, and which may be tlenominated the plattie phenomena of the cells ; secondly, those which result from chemical changes,... | |
| Robert Mark Wenley - 1910 - 328 páginas
...force, like matter, is never created." For Schwann, " the phenomena attending the formation of cells may be arranged in two natural groups : first those...to the combination of the molecules to form a cell. . . . Secondly, those which result from chemical changes, either in the component particles of the... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1915 - 474 páginas
...nutrition and growth resides not in the organism as a whole, but in the separate elementary parts—the cells. The failure of growth in the case of any particular...which may be denominated the plastic phenomena of the eel's; secondly, those which result from chemical changes either in the component particles of the... | |
| 1871 - 858 páginas
...this word, Schwann says, respecting the formation of cells, " Those phenomena may be arranged into two natural groups : first, those which relate to...molecules to form a cell, and which may be denominated the flattie phenomena of the cells; secondly, those which result from chemical changes either in the component... | |
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