That this Congress records its conviction that experiments on living animals have proved of the utmost service to medicine in the past and are indispensable to its future progress. American Medicine - Page 6061913Full view - About this book
| 1880 - 506 pages
...dissentient, as far as I could see, and certainly with much cheering : — " That this Congress records its conviction that experiments on living animals...service to medicine in the past, and are indispensable for its future progress; and accordingly, while strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1881 - 658 pages
...passed, without a single dissentient, at its concluding general meeting : — "That this Congress records its conviction that experiments on living animals...service to medicine in the past, and are indispensable for its future progress ; and accordingly, while strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1881 - 664 pages
...without a single dissentient, at its concluding general meeting : — '' That this Congress records its conviction that experiments on living animals...service to medicine in the past, and are indispensable for its future progress ; and accordingly, while strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary... | |
| James Samuelson, Sir William Crookes - 1881 - 782 pages
...International Medical Congress leaves something to be desired. It asserts merely " That this Congress records its conviction that experiments on living animals...service to medicine in the past, and are indispensable for its future progress ; that, accordingly, while strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary... | |
| George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman - 1881 - 798 pages
...resolution forwarded by Professor M. Foster, from the Physiological Section : " That this Congress records its conviction that experiments on living animals...service to medicine in the past, and are indispensable for its future progress ; that accordingly, whilst strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary... | |
| 1881 - 836 pages
...Congress leaves something to be desired. It asserts merely " That this Congress records its conviiflion that experiments on living animals have proved of...service to medicine in the past, and are indispensable for its future progress ; that, accordingly, while strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary... | |
| 1881 - 806 pages
...living animals have proved of the utmost service to medicine, and are indispensable for its further progress ; that, accordingly, while strongly deprecating...the infliction of unnecessary pain, it is of opinion that, alike in the interest of man and of animals, it is not desirable to restrict competent persons... | |
| George B. Shattuck Abner Post - 1882 - 672 pages
...Department to present to him the following resolution : " That this Congress records its convictiou that experiments on living animals have proved of...it is of opinion, alike in the interests of man and animals, that it is not desirable to restrict competent persons in the performance of such expeiiuifiits."... | |
| 1882 - 1210 pages
...unanimously adopted the following proper and appropriate resolution : — "That this Congress records Its conviction that experiments on living animals have proved of the utmost service to medicine In tbe past, and are Indispensable for Its future progress ; that, accordingly, while strongly deprecating... | |
| 1883 - 502 pages
...Medical Congress in 1881. This resolution is in the following terms : — " That this meeting records its conviction that experiments on living animals...past, and are indispensable to its future progress, and accordingly, while strongly deprecating the infliction of unnecessary pain, it is of opinion that,... | |
| |