This volume on Edmund Burke (1729 97), published in 1879 in the first series of English Men of Letters, was written by the general editor of the series, John Morley (1838 1923). Himself a politician as well as an author, Morley had previously published a 'historical study' of Burke in 1867, but emphasises in an introductory note that this book 'is biographical rather than critical' and is intended as a narrative life. Morley himself was a radical in politics, and his interest in Burke, who he does not hesitate to characterise on occasion as a narrow-minded reactionary, may seem surprising,...
This volume on Edmund Burke (1729 97), published in 1879 in the first series of English Men of Letters, was written by the general editor of the serie...
"Immunopharmacology," why not "pharmacoimmunology"? Professor H. O. Schild University College London, 1962 An intact immune response is essential for survival, as is evidenced by the various innate immune deficiency syndromes and by the emergence of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) as a pandemic during the last decade. Substances which stimulate the immune response might contribute to the therapy of AIDS and its precursor, AIDS-related syndrome, as well as of other clinical conditions in which immune responses can be diminished, such as carcinoma and infections. In other...
"Immunopharmacology," why not "pharmacoimmunology"? Professor H. O. Schild University College London, 1962 An intact immune response is essential for ...