Food is either applied in the increase of the mass of a structure (ie, in nutrition), or it is applied in the replacement of a structure wasted (ie, in reproduction). The primary condition for the existence of life is the reception and assimilation of... The Year-book of Facts in Science and Art - Seite 113herausgegeben von - 1843Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| 1842 - 588 Seiten
...mass of a structure (ie in nutrition), or it is applied in the replacement of a structure wasted (ie in reproduction). The primary condition for the existence...continual absorption of oxygen from the atmosphere. AH vital activity results from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere, and the elements... | |
| 1842 - 1224 Seiten
...wasted, (that is, in reproduction.) The primary condition for the existence of life is the inception and assimilation of food. But there is another condition...of oxygen from the atmosphere. All vital activity neulb from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of th» food. All changes... | |
| Justus Freiherr von Liebig - 1842 - 598 Seiten
...atmosphere undergo in the organism under the influence of the vital force. All vital activity arises from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food. In the processes of nutrition and reproduction, we perceive the passage of matter from the state of... | |
| Justus Freiherr von Liebig, Lyon Playfair Baron Playfair - 1843 - 260 Seiten
...atmosphere undergo m the organism under the influence of the vital force. All vital activity arises from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food. In the processes of nutrition and reproduction, we perceive the passage of matter from the state of... | |
| Martyn Paine - 1847 - 852 Seiten
...the chemical action be impeded, the vital phenomena must take new forms." " ALL VITAL ACTIVITY ARISES from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food." — LIEBIO'S Animal Chemistry. 4. " THE LIFE of animals exhibits itself in the continual absorption... | |
| 1848 - 372 Seiten
...cannot, however, be fairly estimated separate and apart from its context— ; 'A11 vital activity arises from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food."—Animal Chemistry, p. 9. The proper construction of this passage is this;—when the vital... | |
| Martyn Paine - 1849 - 258 Seiten
...cause of vital force, either in animals or plants, is a chemical process." "All vital activity arises from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food." " Physiology has sufficiently decisive grounds for the opinion that every motion, every manifestation... | |
| Scholes Butler Birch - 1857 - 156 Seiten
...atmosphere undergo in the organism under the influence of the vital force." '.' All vital activity arises from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food." " Waste, in the animal body, is a change in the state, or in the composition of some of its parts,... | |
| James Alexander - 1858 - 322 Seiten
...atmosphere undergo in the organism under the influence of the vital force." " All vital activity arises from the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food." " Waste in the animal body is a change in the state or in the composition of some of its parts, and... | |
| Martyn Paine - 1858 - 1274 Seiten
...be impeded, the vital phenomena must take new forms." " ALL VITAL ACTIVITY ARISES from the 7iiutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elements of the food." — LIEBIG'S Animal Chemistry. 4. " THE LIFE of animals exhibits itself in th,e continual absorption... | |
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