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ARTICLE |

The Nervous System and its Constituent Neurons.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(21):1307. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450730063031.
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ABSTRACT

The original suggestion of this work was found in a series of articles by the author which appeared in the N. Y. Medical Journal during the past two or three years. The subject soon outgrew the periodic publication and the present volume is the result. The introductory chapters are those that have already appeared, revised and brought up to date, but the bulk of the book is new. In the first part of the volume the newer conceptions of the histology of the central and peripheral nervous system are reviewed. Dr. Barker has no notion that the discoveries of Apathy and Bethe will seriously affect the neuron theories, but gives considerable space to them in his introductory chapters. So far as we can judge, he makes his case, and it seems to be hardly doubtful that the neuron is a permanent conception in our views of the anatomy of the

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