2004, Number 1
<< Back Next >>
Gac Med Mex 2004; 140 (1)
II. The Scientific Vocation: Commitment to Permanent Change and Continuing Education.
Kretschmer R
Language: Spanish
References: 10
Page: 49-52
PDF size: 473.59 Kb.
Text Extraction
No Abstract
REFERENCES
Bullock A. La tradición humanista en Occidente.Madrid, España: Alianza Editorial; 1989.
Cantwell AM, Friedíander E, Tramm ML. Ethics and anthropology: facing future issues in human biology, globalism, and cultural property. Ann NY Acad Sci 1999;882:137-141.
Cook-Grossman D, Valtin H. Great lssues for medicine in the twenty-first century. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. (882), 1999 (Anécdota de la Sinfonía Inconclusa, (Koop, E., pp. 137 ) etc., etc., etc.).
Damasio AR, Harrington A, Kaganj, McEwen B, Moss H, Shaikh R, editors. Unity of knowledge. Ann NY Acad Sci 2001:935.
Martínez-Palomo A. Una perspective mexicana. La investigación para mejorar la salud. En: Freeman P, Gómez-Dantés O, Frenk J, editors.Los sistemas de salud ante la globalización. Retos y oportunidades para América del Norte. México: Academia Nacional de Medicina (México) e Institute of Medicine (USA);1995.pp. 183-189.
Gross PR, Levitt N, Lewis MW, editors. The flight from science and reason. Ann. NY Acad Sci 1996;775.
GuillotJ, Kumar M. Science and the retreat from reason. New York: Monthly Review Press;1997.
Perutz MF. I Wish I’d made you angry earlier: essays on science, scientists and humanity. New York: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press;1998.
Rymond S. Life sciences and health challenges. NY Acad Sci; 1998:105.
Sarton G. The history of science and the new humanism. Oxford, UK: Transaction Publishers; 1998.