Michael Foster and the Cambridge School of Physiology : The Scientific Enterprise in Late Victorian Society /
Despite great ferment and activity among historians of science in recent years, the history of physiology after 1850 has received little attention. Gerald Geison makes an important contribution to our knowledge of this neglected area by investigating the achievements of English physiologists at the...
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Princeton, New Jersey :
Princeton University Press,
1978.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Part 1 : The Background: Foster and English Physiology,1840-1870; 1. Introduction; 2. The Stagnancy of English Physiology,1840-1870; National Styles in Continental Physiology,1840-1870 ; The Anatomical Bias of English Physiology; Anatomical Bias and the Structure of English Medical Education; The Relative Unimportance of the Anatomical Bias for the Position of English Physiology, 1800-1840; The Stagnancy Becomes Apparent: Experimental Science and the English Universities, 1840-1870; Conclusion; 3. Foster on His Way to Cambridge; William Sharpey, Foster's mentor in physiology.
- Voyage to the Red Sea and medical practice in Huntingdon, 1859-1867University College and the Call to Cambridge, 1867-1870; Part 2: The Institutional Framework for Foster's Achievement; 4. Foster Meets Cambridge: Trinity College, University Reform, and the Rise of Laboratory Science; Science at Oxford and Cambridge c. 1870: The Outward Similarities ; Wherein the Difference Lay: Tradition and Trinity College; Foster, Trinity College, and the Rise of Laboratory Biology in Late Victorian Cambridge; Conclusion.
- 5. The Transformation of Biology in Late Victorian Cambridge: Foster, Huxley, and the Introduction of Laboratory Biology in EnglandBiology at Cambridge When Foster Arrived: Babington and Newton; Foster and Balfour: The Rise of Embryology and Animal Morphology; Foster, Huxley, and the South Kensington Course in Elementary Biology; Foster, Martin, Huxley, and the Development of Elementary Laboratory Biology; Laboratory Biology in England: Where Foster and Cambridge Belong in the Web of Influence; 6. The Rise of Physiology in Late Victorian Cambridge: Ways and Means, 1870-1883.
- Seizing the Transient Moment: Foster, Cambridge, and the Transformation of English PhysiologyFoster's Ambassador at Large: George Murray Humphry, Medical Reform, and Physiology; Enrollments, Bricks, and Mortar: the Growth of Foster's Laboratory and Courses, 1870-1883; Students and Fellowships: Manpower and Resources in the Cambridge School; Dramatis Personnae: Teaching Personnel in the Early Cambridge School; ""Work, Finish, Publish"": Foster, Organs of Publication, and the Ideology of Research; Part 3: The Problem of the Heartbeat and the Rise of the Cambridge School.
- 7. Foster as Research Physiologist: The Problem of the HeartbeatFoster and the Problem of the Heartbeat, 1864-1869; The Royal Institution Lectures of 1869: Toward a More General Context for Foster's Views on the Heartbeat; The Significance of the Royal Institution Lectures: Rhythmicity and the physiological Division of Labour
- Foster's Later Research on the Problem of the Heartbeat: The Discovery of Nerveless Inhibition in the Snail's Heart; Foster and Dew-Smith, 1876: the Effects of Electric Currents on the Frog's Heart; Foster and the Effects of Upas Antiar on the Frog's Heart, 1876.