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Human Pathology: A Textbook

JAMA. 1939;112(8):768. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800080088031.
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ABSTRACT

The object of a textbook of any scientific subject is to provide for the initiate a logical and understandable guide which will enable him (1) to acquire the fundamental principles, (2) to orient the different yet related phases of the subject material, (3) to incorporate all such information into the sum total of a fruitful knowledge and (4) to instil the spirit of response to the challenge in the search for new and as yet unknown truths. Such a concept of purpose is especially applicable to the comprehensive subject of pathology.

Textbooks in pathology are written from the point of view of the generalizations of disease as applied to the various systems and organs (general pathology), from the point of view of the specific considerations of the morbid anatomy of the various organs and systems (organ or system pathology), or with a combination of these two considerations. The latter is

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