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No better evidence of the progress of neurology in the last decade can be offered than this three volume contribution on the "Cytology and Cellular Pathology of the Nervous System." That this is due in large part to the newer histologic methods is acknowledged by the fact that these volumes are dedicated to Ramón y Cajal. Not only have such methods enhanced the knowledge of normal cytology and cellular pathology and brought about a reconstruction of ideas in neuropathology, but they have undoubtedly caused a widening of knowledge and conception of the physiology of the nervous system and clinical neurology as well, so that the modern neurologist who essays, for example, to diagnose tumors of the brain clinically must have a workable knowledge of the natural life history of such tumors. A glance at the contents of these volumes demonstrates the fact that no one person could possibly know or
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