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Titles
- Human physiology7
- Human physiology (Volume 1)7
- Human physiology (Volume 2)7
- Hand-book of physiology3
- Manual of physiology3
- A syllabus of a course of lectures on the institutes of medicine2
- A treatise on anatomy, physiology, and hygiene: designed for colleges, academies, and families2
- A treatise on human physiology: designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine2
- Examinations in anatomy, physiology, practice of physic, surgery, materia medica, chemistry, and pharmacy: for the use of students, who are about to pass the College of Surgeons, or the medical or transport board2
- Handbook of physiology2
- The anatomist's vade-mecum: containing the anatomy and physiology of the human body2
- A text-book on anatomy, physiology, and hygiene for the use of schools and families1
- A treatise on anatomy, physiology, and hygiene: designer [sic] for colleges, academies, and families1
- A treatise on physiology and hygiene: for schools, families, and colleges1
- A view of the science of life: on the principles established in the Elements of medicine, of the late celebrated John Brown, M.D. : with an attempt to correct some important errors of that work : and cases in illustration, chiefly selected from the records of their practice, at the General Hospital, at Calcutta1
- Address of the Honourable Dr. Rolph: delivered before the faculty and students of medicine, of the University of Victoria College, Toronto, 1854-51
- An address delivered before the American Physiological Society, March 7, 18371
- An address delivered in the Homoeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania: as a preliminary to the course of 1849-501
- An essay on the most fundamental principles in the science of medicine: addressed to the Medical Society of Philadelphia1
- An inaugural essay on the mutual subserviencies of the different parts of the body: and the power of one part to perform the function of another : submitted to the examination of the Rev. J. Andrews ... the Trustees & medical faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, on the twenty-first day of April, 1806 for the degree of Doctor of Medicine1