Produktart
Zustand
Einband
Weitere Eigenschaften
Gratisversand
Land des Verkäufers
Verkäuferbewertung
Verlag: Bristol: Thoemmes, 2001
ISBN 10: 1843716135ISBN 13: 9781843716136
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. No Jacket. 1st Edition. (Reprint of the 1872 edition. Still in the shrinkwrapping. These constitute Volume 2 & 3 in the Thoemmes serioes : Evolution and the Spontaneous Generation Debate. Book.
Verlag: BristolThoemmes Pr, 2004
ISBN 10: 1843716143ISBN 13: 9781843716143
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: As New. No Jacket. 1st Edition. Reprint. Still shrink wrapped. Book.
Verlag: The Lancet. . ., Vol. I, No. V, (January 30, 1904)., In [London]:, 1904
Anbieter: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Schweiz
Erstausgabe
283 x 199 mm. 4to. 286-287 pp. (Entire Vol.: ii, 48 [ads], (274)-348, 49-96, iii-iv [ads] pp.). Illus. Self-wraps; dog-eared, fore-edge chipped. Ex library rubber stamp on top cover, else very good. FIRST EDITION. Henry Bastian was one of the founders of English neurology. He is remembered for "Bastian's law," which states that transverse lesion of the cord above the lumbar enlargement results in the abolition of the tendon reflexes of the lower extremities. He garners five references in Garrison and Morton.
Verlag: LIGHTNING SOURCE INC, 2015
ISBN 10: 1296301451ISBN 13: 9781296301453
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand. | Seiten: 724.
Verlag: London, Macmillan and Co., 1875
Anbieter: Antiquariat im Hufelandhaus GmbH vormals Lange & Springer, Berlin, Deutschland
Kl.-8°. 9 Abb. im Text, XV, 340 S., 31 (1) S. Anzeigen. Original-Leinenband mit goldgeprägtem Rückentitel (leicht berieben und bestoßen, Rücken etwas aufgehellt). Lagen teils unaufgeschnitten. Innengelenke sowie Buchblock an einigen Stellen geplatzt oder angeplatzt. Stellenweise geringfügig fleckig. Sonst gut erhalten. Sprache: Englisch.
Verlag: LIGHTNING SOURCE INC Mai 2016, 2016
ISBN 10: 1355298180ISBN 13: 9781355298182
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.
Verlag: ARKOSE PR, 2015
ISBN 10: 1344043453ISBN 13: 9781344043458
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Ivy Bush Hotel Carmarthen on cancelled letterhead of 'Crindau | Dumfries N.B.' Scotland; 13 January, 1907
Anbieter: Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Manuskript / Papierantiquität
The entry on Bastian in the Oxford DNB finds one of 'the great paradoxes of Bastian's work' to be 'that in neurology his views were highly conventional, while in biology, and what became bacteriology, they became unorthodox and eventually eccentric.' Chief among Bastian's heterodox positions was his belief in the spontaneous generation of bacteria, the subject of the present letter. 8pp, 12mo. On two bifoliums, both with mourning borders. In fair condition, lightly aged and worn, with minor damp staining. He begins by thanking him for his letter and 'the interesting abstract enclosed'. He would 'greatly like to hear your paper but alas! I am compelled to be in the North of England on the 22nd. inst. on official duty'. He states that he is 'dominated by a philosophical creed that makes it as impossible for me to believe in the origin of life from matter as in the origin of matter from life, but facts are facts and demonstration is demonstration, and it may be that you have by your ingenious and laborious experiments brought to light new facts which may necessitate a readjustment of hypotheses.' Bastian will recognise, more than anyone, 'the rigorous nature of the proof that is required before your facts can be accepted. They are at variance with the facts of all other experimenters and assuming that your mico-organisms [sic] are really organisms and not crystals it is still possible that some loop-hole for the intrusion of progeniters into your solution may have escaped you.' He gives examples of spores able to 'resist higher temperatures than has been hitherto believed', and queries why these should have 'adopted various methods of reproduction by fissiparous division'. Not being an expert 'in investigations like yours' he does not feel entitled to criticise them, but at the same time does feel that 'much must be said and done before your overwhelming conclusions can be accepted'. From the distinguished autograph collection of the psychiatrist Richard Alfred Hunter (1923-1981), whose collection of 7000 works relating to psychiatry is now in Cambridge University Library. Hunter and his mother Ida Macalpine had a particular interest in the illness of King George III, and their book 'George III and the Mad Business' (1969) suggested the diagnosis of porphyria popularised by Alan Bennett in his play 'The Madness of George III'.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1882
Anbieter: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Deutschland
Buch Erstausgabe
Int. Wiss. Bibl., 53+53. - Leipzig, F.A. Brockhaus, 1882, kl.8°, XIV, 344 pp., mit 121 Abbildungen in Holzschnitt; VIII, 388 pp., mit 63 Abbildungen in Holzschnitt, 2 Halbledereinbände. First German Edition! Henry Charlton Bastian (26 April 1837 in Truro, Cornwall, England - 17 November 1915 in Chesham Bois, Buckinghamshire) was an English physiologist and neurologist. Bastian "influence on neurology was considerable. His studies encompassed not only natural history and theories of the origins of life, but also clinical aspects of hysteria, new concepts of the aphasias, and original anatomical observations. For almost 30 years he advanced his credited views of the 'kinaesthetic cortex'. Bastian's ideas on abiogenesis were at the time the object of derision, yet in the light of discoveries of the last 60 years, the principles he espoused have prompted more recent scientific enquiries. Bastian's clinical studies yielded several texts. Hitzig and Ferrier had debated the notion of muscle sense and proprioception, but it was Bastian who from the late 1860s claimed that muscle sense was necessary for the brain to coordinate movement. He described small vessel emboli as a cause of delirium and stupor in febrile illnesses, a novel concept which subsequently was verified in certain cases. A monograph in 1875 considered at length the manifestations of paralysis in brain diseases, discussing hemiplegia and its varied localisations and aetiologies that included epilepsy, emotional states and hysteria. Probably his most important book was The Brain as Organ of the Mind which discussed the comparative anatomy and physiology of the nervous system. In his monograph, Various Forms of Hysterical or Functional Paralysis, he distinguished hysteria proper from other functional disorders. Thus, the hemianaesthesia of internal capsular lesions could resemble hysterical hemianaesthesia. Among nine categories of acute spinal paralysis, Bastian described in his book Hysterical Paraplegia in a way that reveals the imperfect knowledge of organic nervous disease in Bastian's day. It constitutes, he says, a 'special class' of functional paralysis, difficult accurately to differentiate, and then only by a dangerous process of exclusion of organic disease. While hysterical paralysis is functional, not all functional paralyses, he says, are hysterical." J.M.S. Pearce: Henry Charlton Bastian (1837-1915): Neglected Neurologist and Scientist. Eur Neurol (2010) 63 (2): pp.73-78.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1902
Anbieter: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Deutschland
Buch Erstausgabe
Leipzig, Verlag von Wilhelm Engelmann, 1902, 8°, VIII, 511 pp., mit 31 Abbildungen im Text und einem Titelbild, orig. Leinenband foliiert; St.a.Tit. Erste Deutsche Ausgabe von "A treatise on aphasia and other speech defects."! "Whilst studying kinaesthesia, he also turned his attention to studies on aphasia, which he pursued for over 30 years. He described two examples of motor aphasia with agraphia, and dyslexia. Thus, he broadened the range of aphasia from Broca's aphemia and Trousseau's amnesic aphasia to include agraphia, receptive aphasia, and alexia, pointing out the visual and auditory components of language. He confirmed the opinions of his friend Herbert Spencer that all thought was dependent on words: 'We think in words in fact, and these words are received as sound impressions in the auditory receptive centres of the cerebral hemispheres.' Head credited him with descriptions of sensory aphasia from posteriorly sited lesions some 5 years before Wernicke (1874), who had failed to mention Bastian's contribution. However, neither provided pathological evidence, and Bastian believed that sensory aphasia had no independent existence. He said that aphasia related to damage to one of four centres for speech: the posteriorly placed (temporal) auditory word centre, the parietal visual word centre, the anteriorly placed frontal 'glosso-kinaesthetic' centre, and the 'cheiro-kinaesthetic' centre for hand movement. But when he published post-mortem findings in a man who had a devastating left-hemisphere stroke with total aphasia 18 years previously but who had later learnt to read again, the huge lesion was not compatible with Bastian's speech schema. It was, he said, 'a puzzling riddle'. His aphasia studies were published in the Lumleian Lectures of 1897 and in a treatise of 1898, which were widely respected." J.M.S. Pearce, Henry Charlton Bastian (1837-1915): Neglected Neurologist and Scientist. Eur Neurol 63/2 (2010): pp.73-78. Henry Charlton Bastian (1837-1915) English physiologist and neurologist. Garrison & Morton No.4629 (1st. engl. Ed. 1898).