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2. Doctors who write literature may be considered to have crossed from science to the humanities obtaining release from the rigid constraints of logic, experiment and fact, and gaining the freedoms of imagination, metaphor and fiction. Compston A Brain; 2009 Jan; 132(Pt 1):1-2. PubMed ID: 19168453 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
3. [Two literary characters in the language of neurology: Ondine (II)]. Navarro FA Rev Neurol; 1997 Oct; 25(146):1629-35. PubMed ID: 9462997 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
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6. Wilder Penfield: his legacy to neurology. Novelist and historian. Stevenson L Can Med Assoc J; 1977 Jun; 116(12):1376-7. PubMed ID: 324604 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
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15. Candace Ward. Desire and disorder: fevers, fictions, and feeling in English Georgian culture Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press, 2007. 297 pp. Sill GM J Med Humanit; 2011 Mar; 32(1):65-7. PubMed ID: 21433322 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
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19. A short history of neurology in the Netherlands. Schulte BP; Endtz LJ Int J Neurol; 1979; 13(1-4):62 p.. PubMed ID: 400668 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
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