Gray's Anatomy for Students is an anatomy textbook inspired by the famous Gray's Anatomy and aimed primarily at medical students. The text has been praised for its innovative illustration style, which emphasizes clarity and a conceptual approach to learning.
Gray's Anatomy was used as the major reference, both for the text and the illustrations.
Famous quotes containing the words gray, anatomy and/or students:
“The lore of our fathers is a fabric of sentences. In our hands it develops and changes, through more or less arbitrary and deliberate revisions and additions of our own, more or less directly occasioned by the continuing stimulation of our sense organs. It is a pale gray lore, black with fact and white with convention. But I have found no substantial reasons for concluding that there are any quite black threads in it, or any white ones.”
—Willard Van Orman Quine (b. 1908)
“But a man must keep an eye on his servants, if he would not have them rule him. Man is a shrewd inventor, and is ever taking the hint of a new machine from his own structure, adapting some secret of his own anatomy in iron, wood, and leather, to some required function in the work of the world. But it is found that the machine unmans the user. What he gains in making cloth, he loses in general power.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“A complacent old Don of Divinity
Used to boast of his daughters virginity:
They must have been dawdlin,
The students of Magdalen
It couldnt have happened at Trinity.”
—Anonymous.