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Excerpt from Ophthalmic Literature, Vol. 2: March, 1912
Collateral reading of anatomy or physiology may be done in text books devoted to those branches. But there are some advantages in having each chapter regarding the diseases of a certain part begin with a sketch of the anatomy and physiology of the part, or at least to have these subjects treated in special chapters in the ophthalmic text-book. The advantage is that such consideration of the anatomy and physiology generally bears much more directly on the clinical facts to be studied, than do the accounts of the same tissues and functions contained in the text-books of anatomy and physiology.
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