EDDY'S PHYSIOLOGY 



COURSE 



By WALTER H. EDDY, Chairman of Department of 

 Biology, High School of Commerce, New York City. 



Text-Book of General Physiology ^1.20 



Experimental Physiology and Anatomy 60 



THIS course, consisting of text-book and experimental 

 work, places the study of physiology where it properly 

 belongs — in the laboratory. It is therefore suited for 

 use in the most modern schools and by the most progressive 

 teachers. Although intended especially to supply all the 

 material required by the New York State syllabus, its topical 

 arrangement and division of subject matter adapt it equally to 

 schools in other localities. 



^ The laboratory manual contains simple practical exercises 

 which afford information of much value supplementing the 

 pupil's daily experience. The directions for performing the 

 work are ample and easily grasped. 



^ The text supplements the laboratory exercises, and enables 

 the pupil to complete and round out the information he has 

 gained by experiment. At the same time it aids the teacher 

 in directing the experimental inductions and gives unity to 

 the work. 



•jl Both text and manual treat physiology as a study of 

 function in Hving forms and as a part of the training in 

 biologic science and not as an isolated subject. The physi- 

 ological processes are presented as activities common to all 

 living matter, and much space is given to the comparative 

 study of function in the animal forms other than man. The 

 teaching of recent biological progress is recognized in the 

 prominence given to the cell and protoplasm as the structural 

 and physiological units. 



AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY 



(152) 



