An introduction to physiological chemistry. By Meyer Bodansky, Ph.D. Pp. vii+440. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; London: Chapman & Hall, Ltd., 1927. Price 20s
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1927
- Weight
- 145 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0368-4075
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Dl9 early stngc, and only rcaliscs later, if at nIl, that what lic is supposed to have lcarnt in thc physics laboratory lias any bcaring 011 the problcms of living organisms. Ycry fcw dctailcd criticisms sccm to bc callcd for, and hhosc only trivial oms. Thc statcmcnt on pngc 1 G that
tioil of any new niiittcr brought into the glasshousc. Thc cbicf glasshousc crops arc tnbiilated in iiit nppciidix with their iissociatcd pcsts atid chiirircteriutic injuries. A second index consists of n sclectcd bibliography, iiiid t h e is II vcry dcquntc iiidcs. This is B very practiciil book ai
for thc latcnt kcnt of fusion of ice. But wliy linre Blaswcll's " dcnions " beconic " dcrils " ? The book is cxccptionally wcll printed on good p p c r and is of convcnicnt ilimcnsions. It can bc rccommciidcd to all who find the niajority of modern works on physical cheinistry too I' philosophical
detriil is gcncriilly given t.0 ciinblc the process~s to be worked nccurntcly. 'I!hey sl~ould be very uscful to aturlcnt.~, ~vhet~her C;ernin ti or J3ritish.