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" When circumstances thus uniform, are attended with appearances thus similar, we cannot withold our assent from the opinion, that they stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. But of the manner in which this influence is exerted upon the... "
Edinburgh Journal of Medical Science - Page 197
1826
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 71

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1843 - 626 pages
...yield in four or five cases in succession, there is reason to hope that the remedy and the cure may stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. But even this will not satisfy a real master of his art, who will require a still more extended experience...
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Memoirs of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Manchester

Natural history - 1824 - 544 pages
...atmosphere. When circumstances thus uniform, are attended with appearances thus similar, we cannot withold our assent from the opinion, that they stand in the...investigation, but I am not aware that this has been done. In examining the heads of these individuals, we find them present a configuration very similar,...
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Elements of mental and moral science; designed to exhibit the original ...

George Payne - 1828 - 574 pages
...analysis, like manifestly compound physical substances? or do they even admit of any such analysis ? Do they stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other, — one thought introducing another thought, and one feeling another feeling, as certain effects always...
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The Free Church magazine [ed. by W. M. H.]., Volumes 5-6; Volume 8

W M H - 1851 - 786 pages
...and the business of science is merely to discover, euumerate, and classify the various events which stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. But never did genuine honest science affirm that the laws of nature were exempted from the control and...
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The Works of Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie: ... with an Autobiography, Volume 1

Sir Benjamin Brodie, Charles Hawkins - Medicine - 1865 - 770 pages
...yield in four or five cases in succession, there is reason to hope that the remedy and the cure may stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. But even this will not satisfy a real master of his art, who will require a still more extended experience...
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The Monthly Religious Magazine, Volumes 25-26

Unitarianism - 1861 - 892 pages
...theological truths. Was there ever a clearer connection than between spiritual knowledge and moral virtue ? They stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. When once it is seen and established as a moral mathematics, that truth is only the form of good, the...
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Medical Bulletin, Volume 2, Issue 3

Cincinnati university. College of medicine, University of Cincinnati. College of Medicine - Medicine - 1924 - 48 pages
...primary contracted kidney? In other words, that the two scleroses have a common etiology rather than that they stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. In the second place, it is • claimed by many that the arteriosclerosis of the secondary contracted...
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The Chicago Medical Journal, Volume 1; Volume 15

Medicine - 1858 - 662 pages
...was so complete, and resulted apparently so entirely from confinement, that he is equally with me of the opinion that they stand in the relation of cause and effect. This opinion is strengthened by the fact, that the wild animals caged in the different menageries and...
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The Psychological Clinic: A Journal for the Study and Treatment of ..., Volume 6

Lightner Witmer - Child development - 1913 - 294 pages
...fundamental fact in the case; namely, that the coffee drinking and the deficiencies noted do not necessarily stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other, but rather that they are both effects of one or more underlying causes, such for example as the poverty,...
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THE BRITISH AND FOREIGN MEDICAL REVIEW

JOHN FORBES M.D. F.R.S. F.G.S - 1842 - 608 pages
...presume," says Mr. Johnson, " that in many if not in most instances the discharge and the condylomata stand in the relation of cause and effect to each other. But once produced, the condylomatous sores undoubtedly have the property of giving rise to fresh ones both...
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