منابع مشابه
[The body and the medical knowledge in the eighteenth century: an interview with Jean Abreu].
The history of science is a growing and well-recognized area in Brazil, however, medicine during the colonial period is not well covered by research. Aiming to address this subject, this interview was carried out with Professor Jean Luiz Neves Abreu, an important researcher of the history of medicine during the Luso-Brazilian Empire of the eighteenth century. By speaking of his personal career,...
متن کاملBrian Blais’ Homemade Guide to Special Relativity
It is then easy to derive the well-known Lorentz transformation equations, those equations which allow us to convert between events measured in one frame to those measured in the other. Two observers in different frames may not measure the same events at the same place or time, but they must agree on all of the laws of physics regarding those events in order for the principle of relativity to h...
متن کاملThe nurse theorists: 21st-century updates--Jean Watson. Interview by Jacqueline Fawcett.
Jean Watson had planned to write a book about an integrated curriculum for a baccalaureate curriculum in nursing. Instead, she developed a novel structure for basic nursing processes, which was published in the bookNursing: ThePhilosophy and Science of Caring (Watson, 1979). The work presented in that book solved some of Watson’s conceptual and empirical problems about nursing and formed the fo...
متن کاملJean - Paul Fermand and Jean - Claude Brouet
In the majority o f chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLL), proliferative B lymphocytes are thought to be frozen in vivo at a given maturat ion stage (1). Recently, several studies have emphasized that CLL cells could be driven to different iate into plasma cells in vitro (with or without proliferation) upon t r iggering by mitogens (2, 3, 4) or T cel l -der ived factors (5, 6). Th u s far, howeve...
متن کاملJean Perrin
1. The first indication of the phenomenon.-When we consider a fluid mass in equilibrium, for example, some water in a glass, all the parts of the mass appear completely motionless to us. If we put into it an object of greater density it falls and, if it is spherical, it falls exactly vertically. The fall, it is true, is the slower the smaller the object; but, so long as it is visible, it falls ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Cahiers Charlevoix: Études franco-ontariennes
سال: 2000
ISSN: 1203-4371,2371-6878
DOI: 10.7202/1039362ar