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Charles Richet

Charles Robert Richet (25 August 1850 – 4 December 1935) was a French physiologist at the Collège de France known for his pioneering work in immunology. In 1913, he won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "in recognition of his work on anaphylaxis".[1] Richet devoted many years to the study of paranormal and spiritualist phenomena, coining the term "ectoplasm". He also believed in the inferiority of Black people, was a proponent of eugenics and presided over the French Eugenics Society towards the end of his life. The Richet line of professorships of medical science would continue through his son Charles and his grandson Gabriel.[2] Gabriel Richet was one of the great pioneers of European nephrology.[3]

Charles Richet
Born(1850-08-25)25 August 1850
Paris, France
Died4 December 1935(1935-12-04) (aged 85)
Paris, France
Alma materUniversity of Paris
AwardsNobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1913)

Career

 
Richet in 1922

He was born on 25 August 1850 in Paris the son of Alfred Richet. He was educated at the Lycee Bonaparte in Paris then studied Medicine at university in Paris.[4]

Richet spent a period of time as an intern at the Salpêtrière hospital in Paris, where he observed Jean-Martin Charcot's work with then so called "hysterical" patients.[citation needed]

In 1887, Richet became professor of physiology at the Collège de France investigating a variety of subjects such as neurochemistry, digestion, thermoregulation in homeothermic animals, and breathing.[5] In 1898, he became a member of the Académie de Médecine.[citation needed] In 1914, he became a member of the Académie des Sciences.[5]

Richet discovered the analgesic drug chloralose with Maurice Hanriot.[6]

Richet had many interests, and he wrote books about history, sociology, philosophy, psychology, as well as theatre and poetry. He was a pioneer in aviation.[5]

He was involved in the French pacifist movement. Starting in 1902, pacifist societies began to meet at a National Peace Congress, often with several hundred attendees. Unable to unify the pacifist forces they set up a small permanent delegation of French Pacifist Societies in 1902, which Richet led, together with Lucien Le Foyer as secretary-general.[7]

Discovery of anaphylaxis

Richet, working with Paul Portier, discovered the phenomenon of anaphylaxis.[8] In 1901, they joined Albert I, Prince of Monaco on a scientific expedition around the French coast of Atlantic Ocean.[9] On board Albert's ship, Princesse Alice II, they extracted a toxin (which they called a hypnotoxin) that is produced by cnidarians such as Portuguese man o' war)[10] and sea anemone (Actinia sulcata).[11]

In their first experiment on the ship, they injected a dog with the toxin, expecting the dog to develop immunity (tolerance) to the toxin, but instead it suffered a severe immune reaction (hypersensitivity). In 1902, they repeated the injections in their laboratory and found that dogs normally tolerated the toxin at first injection, but when given subsequent injections three weeks later, they always developed fatal shock, regardless of the dose of the toxin they were given.[11] Thus, they discovered that the first dose, instead of inducing tolerance (prophylaxis) as they had expected, caused further doses to be deadly.[12]

In 1902, Richet coined the term aphylaxis to describe the phenomenon; he later changed it to anaphylaxis because he thought it was more euphonious.[13] The term is from the Greek ἀνά-, ana-, meaning "against", and φύλαξις, phylaxis, meaning "protection".[14] On 15 February 1902, Richet and Portier jointly presented their experiments to the Societé de Biologie in Paris.[15][16] Their research is regarded as the beginning of the scientific study of allergy (the word was coined by Clemens von Pirquet in 1906).[17] It helped explain hay fever and other allergic reactions to foreign substances, asthma, certain reactions to intoxication, and certain cases of sudden cardiac death. Richet continued to study the phenomenon of anaphylaxis, and in 1913 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work.[18][19][1]

Parapsychology

Richet was deeply interested in the idea of extrasensory perception, and in hypnosis. In 1884, Alexandr Aksakov interested him in the medium of Eusapia Palladino.[citation needed] In 1891, Richet founded the Annales des sciences psychiques. He kept in touch with renowned occultists and spiritualists of his time such as Albert von Schrenck-Notzing, Frederic William Henry Myers and Gabriel Delanne.[citation needed] In 1919, Richet became honorary chairman of the Institut Métapsychique International in Paris, and, in 1930, it’s full-time president.[20]

Richet hoped to find a physical mechanism that would scientifically validate the existence of paranormal phenomena.[21] He wrote: "It has been shown that as regards subjective metapsychics the simplest and most rational explanation is to suppose the existence of a faculty of supernormal cognition ... setting in motion the human intelligence by certain vibrations that do not move the normal senses."[22] In 1905, Richet was named president of the Society for Psychical Research in the United Kingdom.[23]

 
Linda Gazzera a medium Richet investigated, in Paris, 1909.

In 1894, Richet coined the term ectoplasm.[24] Richet believed that some apparent mediumship could be explained physically as due to the external projection of a material substance (ectoplasm) from the body of the medium, but he didn't believe that this proposed substance had anything to do with spirits. He rejected the spirit hypothesis of mediumship as unscientific, instead supporting the sixth-sense hypothesis.[6][25] According to Richet:

It seems to me prudent not to give credence to the spiritistic hypothesis... it appears to me still (at the present time, at all events) improbable, for it contradicts (at least apparently) the most precise and definite data of physiology, whereas the hypothesis of the sixth sense is a new physiological notion which contradicts nothing that we learn from physiology. Consequently, although in certain rare cases spiritism supplies an apparently simpler explanation, I cannot bring myself to accept it. When we have fathomed the history of these unknown vibrations emanating from reality – past reality, present reality, and even future reality – we shall doubtless have given them an unwonted degree of importance. The history of the Hertzian waves shows us the ubiquity of these vibrations in the external world, imperceptible to our senses.[26]

He hypothesized a "sixth sense", an ability to perceive hypothetical vibrations, and he discussed this idea in his 1928 book Our Sixth Sense.[26] Although he believed in extrasensory perception, Richet did not believe in life after death or spirits.[6]

He investigated and studied various mediums, such as Eva Carrière, William Eglinton, Pascal Forthuny, Stefan Ossowiecki, Leonora Piper and Raphael Schermann.[6] From 1905 to 1910, Richet attended many séances led by the medium Linda Gazzera, claiming that she was a genuine medium who had performed psychokinesis, meaning that various objects had been moved in the séance room purely through the force of the mind.[6] Gazzera was exposed as a fraud in 1911.[27] Richet was also fooled into believing that Joaquin María Argamasilla, known as the "Spaniard with X-ray Eyes", had genuine psychic powers.[28] whom Harry Houdini exposed Argamasilla as a fraud in 1924.[29] According to Joseph McCabe, Richet was also duped by the fraudulent mediums Eva Carrière and Eusapia Palladino.[30]

The historian Ruth Brandon criticized Richet as credulous when it came to psychical research, pointing to "his will to believe, and his disinclination to accept any unpalatably contrary indications".[31]

Eugenics and racial beliefs

Richet was a proponent of eugenics, advocating sterilization and marriage prohibition for those with mental disabilities.[32] He expressed his eugenist ideas in his 1919 book La Sélection Humaine.[33] From 1920 to 1926 he presided over the French Eugenics Society.[34]

Psychologist Gustav Jahoda has noted that Richet "was a firm believer in the inferiority of blacks",[35] comparing black people to apes, and intellectually to imbeciles.[36]

Works

Richet's works on parapsychological subjects, which dominated his later years, include Traité de Métapsychique (Treatise on Metapsychics, 1922), Notre Sixième Sens (Our Sixth Sense, 1928), L'Avenir et la Prémonition (The Future and Premonition, 1931) and La Grande Espérance (The Great Hope, 1933).

  • Maxwell, J & Richet, C. Metapsychical Phenomena: Methods and Observations (London: Duckworth, 1905).
  • Richet, C. Physiologie Travaux du Laboratoire (Paris: Felix Alcan, 1909)
  • Richet, C. La Sélection Humaine (Paris: Felix Alcan, 1919)
  • Richet, C. Traité De Métapsychique (Paris: Felix Alcan, 1922).
  • Richet, C. Thirty Years of Psychical Research (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1923).
  • Richet, C. Our Sixth Sense (London: Rider, 1928).

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1913 Charles Richet". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 5 July 2010.
  2. ^ Dworetzky, Murray; Cohen, Sheldon; Cohen, Sheldon G.; Zelaya-Quesada, Myrna (August 2002). "Portier, Richet, and the discovery of anaphylaxis: A centennial". Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 110 (2): 331–336. doi:10.1016/S0091-6749(02)70118-8. PMID 12170279.
  3. ^ Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara; Richiero, Gilberto; Jaar, Bernard G. (13 March 2018). "The Pioneers of Nephrology – Professor Gabriel Richet: "I will maintain"". BMC Nephrology. 19 (1): 60. doi:10.1186/s12882-018-0862-0. ISSN 1471-2369. PMC 5851327. PMID 29534697.
  4. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Wolf, Stewart. (2012). Brain, Mind, and Medicine: Charles Richet and the Origins of Physiological Psychology. Transaction Publishers. pp. 1–101. ISBN 1-56000-063-5
  6. ^ a b c d e Tabori, Paul. (1972). Charles Richet. In Pioneers of the Unseen. Souvenir Press. pp. 98–132. ISBN 0-285-62042-8
  7. ^ Guieu, Jean-Michel (2005). "6 – Tensions nationalistes et efforts pacifistes". La France, l'Allemagne et l'Europe (1871–1945) (in French). Retrieved 11 March 2015.
  8. ^ Richet, Gabriel (2003). "The discovery of anaphylaxis, a brief but triumphant encounter of two physiologists (1902)". Histoire des Sciences Médicales. 37 (4): 463–469. PMID 14989211.
  9. ^ Dworetzky, Murray; Cohen, Sheldon; Cohen, Sheldon G.; Zelaya-Quesada, Myrna (2002). "Portier, Richet, and the discovery of anaphylaxis: A centennial". Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 110 (2): 331–336. doi:10.1016/S0091-6749(02)70118-8. PMID 12170279.
  10. ^ Suput, Dusan (2011). "Interactions of Cnidarian Toxins with the Immune System". Inflammation & Allergy - Drug Targets. 10 (5): 429–437. doi:10.2174/187152811797200678. PMID 21824078.
  11. ^ a b Boden, Stephen R.; Wesley Burks, A. (2011). "Anaphylaxis: a history with emphasis on food allergy: Anaphylaxis: a history with emphasis on food allergy". Immunological Reviews. 242 (1): 247–257. doi:10.1111/j.1600-065X.2011.01028.x. PMC 3122150. PMID 21682750.
  12. ^ May, Charles D. (1985). "The ancestry of allergy: Being an account of the original experimental induction of hypersensitivity recognizing the contribution of Paul Portier". Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 75 (4): 485–495. doi:10.1016/S0091-6749(85)80022-1. PMID 3884689.
  13. ^ Boden, SR; Wesley Burks, A (July 2011). "Anaphylaxis: a history with emphasis on food allergy". Immunological Reviews. 242 (1): 247–57. doi:10.1111/j.1600-065X.2011.01028.x. PMC 3122150. PMID 21682750., citing May CD, "The ancestry of allergy: being an account of the original experimental induction of hypersensitivity recognizing the contribution of Paul Portier", J Allergy Clin Immunol. 1985 Apr; 75(4):485–495.
  14. ^ "anaphylaxis". merriam-webster.com. from the original on 10 April 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
  15. ^ "De l'action anaphylactique de certains venins | Association des amis de la Bibliothèque nationale de France". sciences.amisbnf.org. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  16. ^ "De l'action anaphylactique de certains venins – ScienceOpen". www.scienceopen.com. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  17. ^ Ring, Johannes; Grosber, Martine; Brockow, Knut; Bergmann, Karl-Christian (2014), Bergmann, K.-C.; Ring, J. (eds.), "Anaphylaxis", Chemical Immunology and Allergy, S. Karger AG, 100: 54–61, doi:10.1159/000358503, ISBN 978-3-318-02194-3, PMID 24925384, retrieved 24 June 2022
  18. ^ Androutsos, G.; Karamanou, M.; Stamboulis, E.; Liappas, I.; Lykouras, E.; Papadimitriou, G. N. (2011). "The Nobel Prize laureate - father of anaphylaxis Charles-Robert Richet (1850-1935) and his anticancerous serum" (PDF). Journal of BUON. 16 (4): 783–786. PMID 22331744.
  19. ^ Richet, Gabriel; Estingoy, Pierrette (2003). "The life and times of Charles Richet". Histoire des Sciences Médicales. 37 (4): 501–513. ISSN 0440-8888. PMID 15025138.
  20. ^ "Charles Richet" 11 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Institut Métapsychique International.
  21. ^ Alvarado, C. S. (2006). "Human radiations: Concepts of force in mesmerism, spiritualism and psychical research" (PDF). Journal of the Society for Psychical Research. 70: 138–162.
  22. ^ Richet, C. (1923). Thirty Years of Psychical Research. Translated from the second French edition. New York: Macmillan.
  23. ^ Berger, Arthur S; Berger, Joyce. (1995). Fear of the Unknown: Enlightened Aid-in-Dying. Praeger. p. 35. ISBN 0-275-94683-5 "In 1905, Professor Charles Richet, the French physiologist on the faculty of medicine of Paris and winner of the Nobel Prize in 1913, was made its president. Although he was a materialist and positivist, he was drawn to psychical research."
  24. ^ Blom, Jan Dirk. (2010). A Dictionary of Hallucinations. Springer. p. 168. ISBN 978-1-4419-1222-0
  25. ^ Ashby, Robert H. (1972). The Guidebook for the Study of Psychical Research. Rider. pp. 162–179
  26. ^ a b Richet, Charles. (nd, ca 1928). Our Sixth Sense. London: Rider. (First published in French, 1928)
  27. ^ McCabe, Joseph. (1920). Is Spiritualism Based On Fraud? The Evidence Given By Sir A. C. Doyle and Others Drastically Examined. London Watts & Co. pp. 33–34
  28. ^ Polidoro, Massimo. (2001). Final Séance: The Strange Friendship Between Houdini and Conan Doyle. Prometheus Books. pp. 171–172. ISBN 978-1591020868
  29. ^ Nickell, Joe. (2007). Adventures in Paranormal Investigation. The University Press of Kentucky. p. 215. ISBN 978-0813124674
  30. ^ McCabe, Joseph. (1920). Scientific Men and Spiritualism: A Skeptic's Analysis. The Living Age. 12 June. pp. 652–657.
  31. ^ Brandon, Ruth. (1983). The Spiritualists: The Passion for the Occult in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 135
  32. ^ Cassata, Francesco. (2011). Building the New Man: Eugenics, Racial Sciences and Genetics in Twentieth-Century Italy. Central European University Press. p. 73. ISBN 978-963-9776-83-8
  33. ^ Mazliak, Laurent; Tazzioli, Rossana. (2009). Mathematicians at War: Volterra and His French Colleagues in World War I. Springer. p. 42. ISBN 978-90-481-2739-9
  34. ^ MacKellar, Calum; Bechtel, Christopher. (2014). The Ethics of the New Eugenics. Berghahn Books. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-1-78238-120-4
  35. ^ Gustav Jahoda. (1999). Images of Savages: Ancient Roots of Modern Prejudice in Western Culture. Routledge. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-415-18855-5
  36. ^ Bain, Paul G; Vaes, Jeroen; Leyens, Jacques Philippe. (2014). Humanness and Dehumanization. Routledge. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-84872-610-9

Further reading

  • M. Brady Brower. (2010). Unruly Spirits: The Science of Psychic Phenomena in Modern France. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-03564-7
  • Sofie Lachapelle. (2011). Investigating the Supernatural: From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France, 1853–1931. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-0013-6
  • Paul Tabori. (1972). Pioneers of the Unseen. Souvenir Press. ISBN 0-285-62042-8
  • Stewart Wolf. (2012). Brain, Mind, and Medicine: Charles Richet and the Origins of Physiological Psychology. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1-56000-063-5

External links

  • Works by Charles Richet at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Charles Richet at Internet Archive
  • Short biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
  • Richet's Dictionnaire de physiologie (1895–1928) as fullscan from the original
  • . Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  • Charles Richet on Nobelprize.org   including the Nobel Lecture on 11 December 1913 Anaphylaxis
  • by Nandor Fodor on SurvivalAfterDeath.org.uk with links to several articles on psychical research

charles, richet, charles, robert, richet, august, 1850, december, 1935, french, physiologist, collège, france, known, pioneering, work, immunology, 1913, nobel, prize, physiology, medicine, recognition, work, anaphylaxis, richet, devoted, many, years, study, p. Charles Robert Richet 25 August 1850 4 December 1935 was a French physiologist at the College de France known for his pioneering work in immunology In 1913 he won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in recognition of his work on anaphylaxis 1 Richet devoted many years to the study of paranormal and spiritualist phenomena coining the term ectoplasm He also believed in the inferiority of Black people was a proponent of eugenics and presided over the French Eugenics Society towards the end of his life The Richet line of professorships of medical science would continue through his son Charles and his grandson Gabriel 2 Gabriel Richet was one of the great pioneers of European nephrology 3 Charles RichetBorn 1850 08 25 25 August 1850Paris FranceDied4 December 1935 1935 12 04 aged 85 Paris FranceAlma materUniversity of ParisAwardsNobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1913 Contents 1 Career 2 Discovery of anaphylaxis 3 Parapsychology 4 Eugenics and racial beliefs 5 Works 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksCareer Edit Richet in 1922 He was born on 25 August 1850 in Paris the son of Alfred Richet He was educated at the Lycee Bonaparte in Paris then studied Medicine at university in Paris 4 Richet spent a period of time as an intern at the Salpetriere hospital in Paris where he observed Jean Martin Charcot s work with then so called hysterical patients citation needed In 1887 Richet became professor of physiology at the College de France investigating a variety of subjects such as neurochemistry digestion thermoregulation in homeothermic animals and breathing 5 In 1898 he became a member of the Academie de Medecine citation needed In 1914 he became a member of the Academie des Sciences 5 Richet discovered the analgesic drug chloralose with Maurice Hanriot 6 Richet had many interests and he wrote books about history sociology philosophy psychology as well as theatre and poetry He was a pioneer in aviation 5 He was involved in the French pacifist movement Starting in 1902 pacifist societies began to meet at a National Peace Congress often with several hundred attendees Unable to unify the pacifist forces they set up a small permanent delegation of French Pacifist Societies in 1902 which Richet led together with Lucien Le Foyer as secretary general 7 Discovery of anaphylaxis EditRichet working with Paul Portier discovered the phenomenon of anaphylaxis 8 In 1901 they joined Albert I Prince of Monaco on a scientific expedition around the French coast of Atlantic Ocean 9 On board Albert s ship Princesse Alice II they extracted a toxin which they called a hypnotoxin that is produced by cnidarians such as Portuguese man o war 10 and sea anemone Actinia sulcata 11 In their first experiment on the ship they injected a dog with the toxin expecting the dog to develop immunity tolerance to the toxin but instead it suffered a severe immune reaction hypersensitivity In 1902 they repeated the injections in their laboratory and found that dogs normally tolerated the toxin at first injection but when given subsequent injections three weeks later they always developed fatal shock regardless of the dose of the toxin they were given 11 Thus they discovered that the first dose instead of inducing tolerance prophylaxis as they had expected caused further doses to be deadly 12 In 1902 Richet coined the term aphylaxis to describe the phenomenon he later changed it to anaphylaxis because he thought it was more euphonious 13 The term is from the Greek ἀna ana meaning against and fyla3is phylaxis meaning protection 14 On 15 February 1902 Richet and Portier jointly presented their experiments to the Societe de Biologie in Paris 15 16 Their research is regarded as the beginning of the scientific study of allergy the word was coined by Clemens von Pirquet in 1906 17 It helped explain hay fever and other allergic reactions to foreign substances asthma certain reactions to intoxication and certain cases of sudden cardiac death Richet continued to study the phenomenon of anaphylaxis and in 1913 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work 18 19 1 Parapsychology EditRichet was deeply interested in the idea of extrasensory perception and in hypnosis In 1884 Alexandr Aksakov interested him in the medium of Eusapia Palladino citation needed In 1891 Richet founded the Annales des sciences psychiques He kept in touch with renowned occultists and spiritualists of his time such as Albert von Schrenck Notzing Frederic William Henry Myers and Gabriel Delanne citation needed In 1919 Richet became honorary chairman of the Institut Metapsychique International in Paris and in 1930 it s full time president 20 Richet hoped to find a physical mechanism that would scientifically validate the existence of paranormal phenomena 21 He wrote It has been shown that as regards subjective metapsychics the simplest and most rational explanation is to suppose the existence of a faculty of supernormal cognition setting in motion the human intelligence by certain vibrations that do not move the normal senses 22 In 1905 Richet was named president of the Society for Psychical Research in the United Kingdom 23 Linda Gazzera a medium Richet investigated in Paris 1909 In 1894 Richet coined the term ectoplasm 24 Richet believed that some apparent mediumship could be explained physically as due to the external projection of a material substance ectoplasm from the body of the medium but he didn t believe that this proposed substance had anything to do with spirits He rejected the spirit hypothesis of mediumship as unscientific instead supporting the sixth sense hypothesis 6 25 According to Richet It seems to me prudent not to give credence to the spiritistic hypothesis it appears to me still at the present time at all events improbable for it contradicts at least apparently the most precise and definite data of physiology whereas the hypothesis of the sixth sense is a new physiological notion which contradicts nothing that we learn from physiology Consequently although in certain rare cases spiritism supplies an apparently simpler explanation I cannot bring myself to accept it When we have fathomed the history of these unknown vibrations emanating from reality past reality present reality and even future reality we shall doubtless have given them an unwonted degree of importance The history of the Hertzian waves shows us the ubiquity of these vibrations in the external world imperceptible to our senses 26 He hypothesized a sixth sense an ability to perceive hypothetical vibrations and he discussed this idea in his 1928 book Our Sixth Sense 26 Although he believed in extrasensory perception Richet did not believe in life after death or spirits 6 He investigated and studied various mediums such as Eva Carriere William Eglinton Pascal Forthuny Stefan Ossowiecki Leonora Piper and Raphael Schermann 6 From 1905 to 1910 Richet attended many seances led by the medium Linda Gazzera claiming that she was a genuine medium who had performed psychokinesis meaning that various objects had been moved in the seance room purely through the force of the mind 6 Gazzera was exposed as a fraud in 1911 27 Richet was also fooled into believing that Joaquin Maria Argamasilla known as the Spaniard with X ray Eyes had genuine psychic powers 28 whom Harry Houdini exposed Argamasilla as a fraud in 1924 29 According to Joseph McCabe Richet was also duped by the fraudulent mediums Eva Carriere and Eusapia Palladino 30 The historian Ruth Brandon criticized Richet as credulous when it came to psychical research pointing to his will to believe and his disinclination to accept any unpalatably contrary indications 31 Eugenics and racial beliefs EditRichet was a proponent of eugenics advocating sterilization and marriage prohibition for those with mental disabilities 32 He expressed his eugenist ideas in his 1919 book La Selection Humaine 33 From 1920 to 1926 he presided over the French Eugenics Society 34 Psychologist Gustav Jahoda has noted that Richet was a firm believer in the inferiority of blacks 35 comparing black people to apes and intellectually to imbeciles 36 Works Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Charles Richet Richet s works on parapsychological subjects which dominated his later years include Traite de Metapsychique Treatise on Metapsychics 1922 Notre Sixieme Sens Our Sixth Sense 1928 L Avenir et la Premonition The Future and Premonition 1931 and La Grande Esperance The Great Hope 1933 Maxwell J amp Richet C Metapsychical Phenomena Methods and Observations London Duckworth 1905 Richet C Physiologie Travaux du Laboratoire Paris Felix Alcan 1909 Richet C La Selection Humaine Paris Felix Alcan 1919 Richet C Traite De Metapsychique Paris Felix Alcan 1922 Richet C Thirty Years of Psychical Research New York The Macmillan Company 1923 Richet C Our Sixth Sense London Rider 1928 See also EditBreguet Richet Gyroplane Eusapia PalladinoReferences Edit a b The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1913 Charles Richet Nobelprize org Retrieved 5 July 2010 Dworetzky Murray Cohen Sheldon Cohen Sheldon G Zelaya Quesada Myrna August 2002 Portier Richet and the discovery of anaphylaxis A centennial Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 110 2 331 336 doi 10 1016 S0091 6749 02 70118 8 PMID 12170279 Piccoli Giorgina Barbara Richiero Gilberto Jaar Bernard G 13 March 2018 The Pioneers of Nephrology Professor Gabriel Richet I will maintain BMC Nephrology 19 1 60 doi 10 1186 s12882 018 0862 0 ISSN 1471 2369 PMC 5851327 PMID 29534697 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 March 2018 a b c Wolf Stewart 2012 Brain Mind and Medicine Charles Richet and the Origins of Physiological Psychology Transaction Publishers pp 1 101 ISBN 1 56000 063 5 a b c d e Tabori Paul 1972 Charles Richet In Pioneers of the Unseen Souvenir Press pp 98 132 ISBN 0 285 62042 8 Guieu Jean Michel 2005 6 Tensions nationalistes et efforts pacifistes La France l Allemagne et l Europe 1871 1945 in French Retrieved 11 March 2015 Richet Gabriel 2003 The discovery of anaphylaxis a brief but triumphant encounter of two physiologists 1902 Histoire des Sciences Medicales 37 4 463 469 PMID 14989211 Dworetzky Murray Cohen Sheldon Cohen Sheldon G Zelaya Quesada Myrna 2002 Portier Richet and the discovery of anaphylaxis A centennial Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 110 2 331 336 doi 10 1016 S0091 6749 02 70118 8 PMID 12170279 Suput Dusan 2011 Interactions of Cnidarian Toxins with the Immune System Inflammation amp Allergy Drug Targets 10 5 429 437 doi 10 2174 187152811797200678 PMID 21824078 a b Boden Stephen R Wesley Burks A 2011 Anaphylaxis a history with emphasis on food allergy Anaphylaxis a history with emphasis on food allergy Immunological Reviews 242 1 247 257 doi 10 1111 j 1600 065X 2011 01028 x PMC 3122150 PMID 21682750 May Charles D 1985 The ancestry of allergy Being an account of the original experimental induction of hypersensitivity recognizing the contribution of Paul Portier Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 75 4 485 495 doi 10 1016 S0091 6749 85 80022 1 PMID 3884689 Boden SR Wesley Burks A July 2011 Anaphylaxis a history with emphasis on food allergy Immunological Reviews 242 1 247 57 doi 10 1111 j 1600 065X 2011 01028 x PMC 3122150 PMID 21682750 citing May CD The ancestry of allergy being an account of the original experimental induction of hypersensitivity recognizing the contribution of Paul Portier J Allergy Clin Immunol 1985 Apr 75 4 485 495 anaphylaxis merriam webster com Archived from the original on 10 April 2010 Retrieved 21 November 2009 De l action anaphylactique de certains venins Association des amis de la Bibliotheque nationale de France sciences amisbnf org Retrieved 24 June 2022 De l action anaphylactique de certains venins ScienceOpen www scienceopen com Retrieved 24 June 2022 Ring Johannes Grosber Martine Brockow Knut Bergmann Karl Christian 2014 Bergmann K C Ring J eds Anaphylaxis Chemical Immunology and Allergy S Karger AG 100 54 61 doi 10 1159 000358503 ISBN 978 3 318 02194 3 PMID 24925384 retrieved 24 June 2022 Androutsos G Karamanou M Stamboulis E Liappas I Lykouras E Papadimitriou G N 2011 The Nobel Prize laureate father of anaphylaxis Charles Robert Richet 1850 1935 and his anticancerous serum PDF Journal of BUON 16 4 783 786 PMID 22331744 Richet Gabriel Estingoy Pierrette 2003 The life and times of Charles Richet Histoire des Sciences Medicales 37 4 501 513 ISSN 0440 8888 PMID 15025138 Charles Richet Archived 11 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Institut Metapsychique International Alvarado C S 2006 Human radiations Concepts of force in mesmerism spiritualism and psychical research PDF Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 70 138 162 Richet C 1923 Thirty Years of Psychical Research Translated from the second French edition New York Macmillan Berger Arthur S Berger Joyce 1995 Fear of the Unknown Enlightened Aid in Dying Praeger p 35 ISBN 0 275 94683 5 In 1905 Professor Charles Richet the French physiologist on the faculty of medicine of Paris and winner of the Nobel Prize in 1913 was made its president Although he was a materialist and positivist he was drawn to psychical research Blom Jan Dirk 2010 A Dictionary of Hallucinations Springer p 168 ISBN 978 1 4419 1222 0 Ashby Robert H 1972 The Guidebook for the Study of Psychical Research Rider pp 162 179 a b Richet Charles nd ca 1928 Our Sixth Sense London Rider First published in French 1928 McCabe Joseph 1920 Is Spiritualism Based On Fraud The Evidence Given By Sir A C Doyle and Others Drastically Examined London Watts amp Co pp 33 34 Polidoro Massimo 2001 Final Seance The Strange Friendship Between Houdini and Conan Doyle Prometheus Books pp 171 172 ISBN 978 1591020868 Nickell Joe 2007 Adventures in Paranormal Investigation The University Press of Kentucky p 215 ISBN 978 0813124674 McCabe Joseph 1920 Scientific Men and Spiritualism A Skeptic s Analysis The Living Age 12 June pp 652 657 Brandon Ruth 1983 The Spiritualists The Passion for the Occult in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 135 Cassata Francesco 2011 Building the New Man Eugenics Racial Sciences and Genetics in Twentieth Century Italy Central European University Press p 73 ISBN 978 963 9776 83 8 Mazliak Laurent Tazzioli Rossana 2009 Mathematicians at War Volterra and His French Colleagues in World War I Springer p 42 ISBN 978 90 481 2739 9 MacKellar Calum Bechtel Christopher 2014 The Ethics of the New Eugenics Berghahn Books pp 18 19 ISBN 978 1 78238 120 4 Gustav Jahoda 1999 Images of Savages Ancient Roots of Modern Prejudice in Western Culture Routledge p 154 ISBN 978 0 415 18855 5 Bain Paul G Vaes Jeroen Leyens Jacques Philippe 2014 Humanness and Dehumanization Routledge p 28 ISBN 978 1 84872 610 9Further reading EditM Brady Brower 2010 Unruly Spirits The Science of Psychic Phenomena in Modern France University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 03564 7 Sofie Lachapelle 2011 Investigating the Supernatural From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France 1853 1931 Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 1 4214 0013 6 Paul Tabori 1972 Pioneers of the Unseen Souvenir Press ISBN 0 285 62042 8 Stewart Wolf 2012 Brain Mind and Medicine Charles Richet and the Origins of Physiological Psychology Transaction Publishers ISBN 1 56000 063 5External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Richet Works by Charles Richet at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Charles Richet at Internet Archive Short biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Richet s Dictionnaire de physiologie 1895 1928 as fullscan from the original Charles Robert Richet photo Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 8 October 2010 Charles Richet on Nobelprize org including the Nobel Lecture on 11 December 1913 Anaphylaxis Short biography by Nandor Fodor on SurvivalAfterDeath org uk with links to several articles on psychical research Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Richet amp oldid 1138724841, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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