Organism as a wholePutnam, 1916 - 379 pages |
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Page 2
... actions of the organism as a whole are con- cerned , we find a totally different situation . The same physiologists who in the explanation of the individ- ual processes would follow the strictly physicochemi- cal viewpoint and method ...
... actions of the organism as a whole are con- cerned , we find a totally different situation . The same physiologists who in the explanation of the individ- ual processes would follow the strictly physicochemi- cal viewpoint and method ...
Page 11
... action of non- physical agencies . We shall see that this has been accomplished for one group of animal instincts ; namely those which determine the relation of animals to light , since these are being gradually reduced to the law of ...
... action of non- physical agencies . We shall see that this has been accomplished for one group of animal instincts ; namely those which determine the relation of animals to light , since these are being gradually reduced to the law of ...
Page 23
... action of the body they can be separated from the body without losing their catalytic efficiency . It was a long time before scientists succeeded in isolat- ing the enzyme of the yeast cell which causes the alco- holic fermentation of ...
... action of the body they can be separated from the body without losing their catalytic efficiency . It was a long time before scientists succeeded in isolat- ing the enzyme of the yeast cell which causes the alco- holic fermentation of ...
Page 24
... action of the hydro- lyzing enzymes is known . The old idea of de la Rive , that a molecule of enzyme combines transitorily with . a molecule of substrate ; the further idea , which may possibly go back to Engler , that the molecule of ...
... action of the hydro- lyzing enzymes is known . The old idea of de la Rive , that a molecule of enzyme combines transitorily with . a molecule of substrate ; the further idea , which may possibly go back to Engler , that the molecule of ...
Page 26
... action but not in the manner suggested by van't Hoff . I The principle enunciated by Armstrong , that in the synthetic action of hydrolytic enzymes not the origi- nal compound but an isomer is formed which can not be hydrolyzed by the ...
... action but not in the manner suggested by van't Hoff . I The principle enunciated by Armstrong , that in the synthetic action of hydrolytic enzymes not the origi- nal compound but an isomer is formed which can not be hydrolyzed by the ...
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agglutination animals annelids Arbacia Arch artificial membrane artificial parthenogenesis assumption bacteria Biol blastomeres blood body butyric acid cell division chapter characters chemical chromosome concentration contained cortical layer cytolysis definite determined digestion disintegration Driesch effect egg of purpuratus embryo enter the egg Entwcklngsmech enzyme existence experiments eyes f. d. ges fact female fertilized fish foreign species franciscanus frog Fundulus genus give rise graft groups grow growth heliotropic hemoglobin heredity hermaphroditic hybrids hypertonic solution idea induce Jour lack of oxygen large number larvæ latter light Lillie lipoids living matter Loeb male Mendelian heredity normal sea water nucleus observed ovaries oxidations parthenogenesis permeability phenomena phenomenon physicochemical Physiol pigment plants polyp positively heliotropic possible produced proteins protoplasm pure reaction regeneration result rôle salts sea urchin sea water sea-urchin egg segment serum shown sperm spermatozoön spermatozoön enters starfish Strongylocentrotus substances synthesis theory tion tissue transplanted unfertilized egg Wasteneys X chromosome