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  Vol. 64 No. 1, July 1960 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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THE SO-CALLED IMBERT-FICK LAW

Harri H. Markiewitz, M.D.
82 High St. Brookline 46, Mass.

Arch Ophthalmol. 1960;64(1):159.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

To the Editor:

—Since the beginning of this century, and particularly in recent years, it has been repeatedly stated by different authorities, that tonometry is an exact science based on the so-called Imbert-Fick law. From this law, J. Friedenwald had come to his mathematical calculations and H. Goldmann to his tonometer.

The so-called law was not introduced by an expert physicist or mathematician but by an ophthalmologist, who invented a tonometer and looked for a logical foundation to support the rational of the instrument and the method.

In science in general, laws are established after a long period of toilsome work. If all natural observations and experimental alteration of nature behave in a certain particular manner, a law can be written concerning these phenomena. Other laws are derived theoretically through logical deductions from mathematical or physical axioms.

The so-called Imbert-Fick law states that the pressure (T) inside a sphere filled . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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