Summary
In the last few years our comprehension of vital phenomena has been rapidly extending. The nature of the sex hormones, and the reactions of living tissues toward them, have been prominent in this advance, and it is now generally understood that compounds formed in the pituitary, gonads and adrenals radically affect the structure and functions of the body and the workings of the mind. To-day our knowledge of these matters is growing so fast that to keep abreast of it is not easy for those who are occupied with.many other affairs. The author felt, therefore, that a co-ordinated summary of experimental inquiries in this field might be useful. In pursuing the idea attention has been confined almost entirely to biological work performed in the laboratory; the ultimate possibility of applying the experience so gained for the benefit of man has been the leading motive.
The essay can hardly be offered to the scientific world without an apology. Biological work is still largely confined to qualitative observation. Life is a changing process and in solving its problems we are often deprived of fixed and measurable data; moreover, the adaptability of living tissue to circumstance involves so many and such complex reactions that an exact prediction of the outcome of any extraneous influence cannot, as a rule, be stated in precise quantitative terms; nor can experimental results in this field be described adequately without specifying the conditions in which they were obtained. The presentation of the subject demanded by the latter drawback may, it is feared, be tedious to the reader, especially as the narrative contains many references to the literature. Sir James Paget complained of the difficulty of composing a readable scientific review, and the present writer is too modest to suppose that he has overcome the difficulty. It is hoped, however, that the matter contained in these pages may supply a trustworthy, though limited, foundation for further progress in both sex-hormone research and clinical practice.
The author would like to regard his book as a tribute to the pioneers of sexhormone physiology, with special regard to John Hunter (1728-93), the first and greatest of them. More than a hundred years before the term hormone had been invented, Hunter showed that the accessory reproductive organs are largely dependent for their development and even for their existence on some influence derived from the gonads.
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- Biological Actions of Sex Hormones , pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013