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4 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing, concise dictionary,
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This review is from: A Dictionary of Biology (Oxford Dictionary of Biology) (Paperback)
This is the best dictionary that I have ever purchased. The dictionary has EVERYTHING that a college biology major (or biology professional) needs. The definitions are thorough and extremely well written. The dictionary itself is organized perfectly. Everything about this dictionary is great--inside and out! A must-buy for any biology student, teacher or anyone else who is interested in the subject.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Biology dictionary,
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This review is from: A Dictionary of Biology (Oxford Dictionary of Biology) (Paperback)
Our high school age daughter is in honors biology. This dictionary has really improved her grades by giving her alternate definitions/explanations of biology terms/concepts. A great resource!
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
No pronunciation guide!,
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This review is from: A Dictionary of Biology (Oxford Dictionary of Biology) (Paperback)
This book would be better titled Glossary of Biology. There are lots of words and terms with definitions, but no pronunciations given for any of them.
1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Maintain that resting potential, now!,
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This review is from: A Dictionary of Biology (Oxford Dictionary of Biology) (Paperback)
The question was: what (or whatever) maintains the resting membrane potential nowadays! I always thought that it was the sodium pump (or Na K ATPase etc.). Recently, I heard: No, it is not the sodium pump that maintains the resting potential. So I checked both the Oxford and the Penguin Dictionaries of Biology. Oxford says that the resting potential is maintained by the sodium pump; however, the Penguin says it is the leaky potassium channels, and sodium pump plays a slight role. Well, it is one of those academic debates, it would seem--which really mean nothing--because nothing is at stake! The debate is from confusing maintenance, recovery, and repair--perhaps. Is it the resting potential (a thing being maintained) or is it the repolarization after a depolarization (a thing in recovery) that we are talking about? Is maintenance still maintenance if you spend energy in extruding the smaller atoms out--well: a running car can be maintained only by spending money? Perhaps, after all, it is only the usual confusion of the frogs in a well: they can only see the stars in their own horizons. The whole biological process has several components, and to know which is the one--well, just take one out and see if the process holds and functions. Which brick is the most important in a wall? Clearly, the truth is never simple, and possibly there is no such thing as the truth. Things evolve using all of the components--and are what they are. So, I guess it is always the context and it is always relative: point of view etc. There is no simple correct answer because the question is incorrectly formulated--without the necessary context. What is more important in the running of a car: the engine or the gas? So get both the Oxford and Penguin--they complement, and both are useful when viewed and understood in the right context: neither can replace the textbook; and no textbook replaces all the source materials--but you need to start somewhere. For a rich fantasy life read Ayul Zamir's Intern Beth. Now, whatever maintains that resting membrane potential!
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A Dictionary of Biology (Oxford Dictionary of Biology) by Robert Hine (Paperback - November 18, 2004)
Used & New from: $0.80
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