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Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke

Ernst Wilhelm Ritter von Brücke (6 July 1819 – 7 January 1892) was a German physician and physiologist. He is credited with contributions made in many facets of physiology.

Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke
Ernst von Brücke
Born(1819-07-06)6 July 1819
Died7 January 1892(1892-01-07) (aged 72)
NationalityGerman
Known forPsychodynamics
Scientific career
FieldsPhysiology
InfluencedSigmund Freud

Biography

He was born Ernst Wilhelm Brücke in Berlin.[1] He graduated in medicine at the University of Berlin in 1842,[2] and during the following year, he became a research assistant to Johannes Peter Müller. In 1845 he founded the Physikalische Gesellschaft (Physical Society) in Berlin, together with Emil Du Bois-Reymond, Hermann von Helmholtz and others, in the house of physicist Heinrich Gustav Magnus. Later on, this became known as the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (German Society of Physics). In 1846, Brücke was elected teacher of anatomy in the Akademie der Bildenden Künste, in Berlin. Following that, in 1848 he was appointed as professor of physiology at the University of Königsberg, replacing Karl Friedrich Burdach (1776–1847). In 1849 he acquired similar duties at the University of Vienna. In 1873, Emperor Franz Joseph I honored Brücke with a noble title—von Brücke—but he rarely used it.

Ernst Fleischl von Marxow (1846–1891), and Joseph Paneth (1857–1890), two colleagues of Freud, were assistants to Brücke in Vienna; however Brücke is most noted for his influence on Sigmund Freud, one of his other medical students. Freud began studying under Brücke in 1877, and continued doing so until 1883. He was tasked to examine the biology of nervous tissue, specifically comparing the brains of humans and other vertebrates to that of invertebrates. Freud would many times call Brücke the professor who shaped him the most.[3] This influence led to the development of the science of psychodynamics. Brücke's teachings did not only influence Freud's work; parts of the noted psychologist's theory were pulled directly from his professor's principles, specifically the idea that all living things are dynamic and must bow to the laws of chemistry and physics.

Brücke retired from the University of Vienna in September 1890 and began working on a book he had long planned to write: Beauty and the Flaws of the Human Stature, which ended up being published as The Human Figure: Its Beauties and Defects.

Research

Brücke is remembered for his research on the nature of cells, work dealing with the physiology of language, investigations on the effect of electricity on muscles and studies of albumin. He also made significant contributions in the fields of physics, plant physiology, microscopic anatomy and experimental physiology.

During Brücke's lifetime, specialization was not popularized. Because of this, he had very diverse interests, and made assorted contributions to the scientific community. Early on in his career, Brücke was interested in optics, which led him to research the tapetum lucidum of the vertebrate eye and the action of the ciliary muscle. Following that, Brücke studied the eye's absorption of various light rays, the mystery of color sensation, and positive and negative afterimages. His work in the science of optics was instrumental towards Helmholtz's invention of the ophthalmoscope.

Further investigation of this related subject found Brücke examining the color changes in chameleons and cephalopods, then studying pigment cells, and observing how muscular contraction is influenced by the duration of a stimulus.

Brücke also made contributions in a completely different discipline, phonetics, when he wrote one of his early works directed at teachers of the deaf: Grundzüge der Physiologie und Systematik der Sprachlaute für Linguisten und Taubstummenlehre.

In addition to optics, cellular investigations, and phonetics, Brücke had a deep interest in philosophy and aesthetics, which was demonstrated by his authorship of semi-popular books, specifically a work on the physiology of color in applied art. Brücke's interest in color and the arts spread out from the scientific aspects of color into the industrial world as he laid down the principles of color combinations for the guidance of workers in fabrics. From this he took the short step from color to artistic form and to the declaration of the underlying principles of what makes art beautiful.

Ideology

Principles

Brücke was a positivist. During his time, it was not an organized school of thought, but more a general attitude toward man, nature, and methods of investigation. He and others who shared his beliefs wanted to bring the approach of the natural sciences in to the investigation of all human thought and action.[4] Brücke delved deeply into his position on positivism in Lectures on Physiology, a course that was published in 1876.[5]

While a medical student in Berlin along with his colleague Emil Du Bois-Reymond, Brücke condemned the ideas of pantheism, all nature mysticism, and all talk of occult divine forces manifesting themselves in the real world. These superstitions contrasted directly with their principles of positivism and their more materialistic views of the world. Later, the two researchers, along with Hermann von Helmholtz, turned their sights against the popular philosophic theory of the time: vitalism. Vitalism is the idea that living things are only different from inanimate objects because they contain a "vital spark", which some believed to be the soul. The three partners contested this theory, stating that only the common physical-chemical functions are involved in the life of an organism.

The alternate theory that the researchers did adhere to was one that became very popular in the coming years: naturalism. This theory fit perfectly with the beliefs of Brücke and his colleagues, as it stated that everything comes from natural properties and sources.

Feud

Josef Hyrtl (1810–1894) was the head of the institute of anatomy at the University of Vienna, and a strong believer in the vitalist theory. He and Brücke initially got along well, and it was Hyrtl's influence that allowed Brücke to be a professor at the University. However, the longer they worked in close quarters, the less civil they became. A feud started that would last throughout their academic careers.

Hyrtl was an older traditionalist with regards to physiology. He was used to anatomy being the dominant method of medical teaching and training, and Brücke challenged this with his newer version of physiology, which was animal experimentation. Brücke built a wooden hut to house dogs for his experiments in a location near both his and Hyrtl's apartments. Hyrtl made complaints that the barking of the dogs was preventing him from sleeping, and this may have been true, however, his real reason for complaining was the fact that he disliked Brücke's methods of investigation into physiology.

The feud expanded into a disagreement about the function of the semicircular canals of the inner ear. Hyrtl believed that based on their shape, the canals were used for directional hearing, while Brücke, having previous experimental knowledge about animals, concluded that the semicircular canals of the inner ear were instead sensory organs for equilibrium. This feud was a part of a deeper disagreement having to do with the two different philosophical viewpoints— vitalism and naturalism— that Hyrtl and Brücke followed.

Debate

In the Nineteenth century, there was a debate about the inaccuracy in the way artists represented movement. This was spurred by the invention of chronophotography and the assumption that this new technology would be able to change the habits of human and animal locomotion from a more aesthetic and "conventional" (incorrect) locomotion to a more natural one.

The debate was expanded to the idea that artists should make their representations, such as paintings and sculptures, in a way that accurately reflects the mechanics of the organism they are imitating. For example: artists painting a horse should paint the horse as frozen in a moment of movement that accurately reflects how a real horse moves, instead of an aesthetic, incorrect position. Brücke disagreed with this idea. He believed that artists should not be forced to contain the aesthetic of their art within parameters of reality and mechanics, because the invention of chronophotography was an ineffective stimulus for changing the locomotion of humans and animals, as it would not prompt the automatic correction of apparent impractical postures and movements. To this end, Brücke believed that there had been a decline in art ever since the artist endeavored to mimic perfect reality instead of seeking out beauty in its multitude of appearances.

Selected works

  • Ueber die Bewegungen der Mimosa pudica. Archiv für Anatomie, Physiologie und wissenschaftliche Medicin: 434–455 (1848) -- On the movements of Mimosa pudica.
  • Beiträge zur vergleichenden Anatomie und Physiologie des Gefässsystems. Denkschriften: Akademie der Wissenschaften Wien, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Classe 3: 335–367 (1852) -- Contributions to the comparative anatomy and physiology of the vascular system.
  • Grundzüge der Physiologie und Systematik der Sprachlaute für Linguisten und Taubstummenlehrer. Wien: C. Gerold & Sohn (1856) -- Fundamentals of physiology and classification of speech sounds for linguists and deaf teachers.
  • Die Elementarorganismen. Sitzungsberichte der Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftlichen Classe der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften 44: 381–406 (1861) -- Elementary organisms.
  • Die Physiologie der Farben für die Zwecke der Kunstgewerbe. Leipzig: S. Hirzel (1866) -- The physiology of colors for the purposes of the arts.
  • Die physiologischen Grundlagen der neuhochdeutschen Verskunst. Wien: C. Gerold & Sohn (1871)
  • Vorlesungen über Physiologie—Lectures on physiology.:

Notes

Regarding personal names: Ritter is a title, translated approximately as Sir (denoting a Knight), not a first or middle name. There is no equivalent female form.

References

  1. ^ "Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts". www.royalacademy.org.uk. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
  2. ^ IBBO-International Biography and Bibliography of Ophthalmologists and Visual Scientist (A-Z). Wayenborgh Publishing. 30 November 2018. ISBN 978-90-6299-896-8.
  3. ^ Gay, Peter (1988). Freud: A Life for our Time (First ed.). New York & London: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-393-02517-0.
  4. ^ Gay, Peter (1988). Freud: A Life for our Time (First ed.). New York & London: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-393-02517-0.
  5. ^ Gay, Peter (1988). Freud: A Life for our Time (First ed.). New York & London: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-393-02517-0.

External links

  •   Media related to Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke at Wikimedia Commons
  • Ernst Wilhelm Ritter von Brücke. WhoNamedIt.
  • Biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
  • The Human Figure: Its Beauties and Defects. In the Preface by William Anderson.
  • Freud was a pioneering neuroscientist. From the newspaper The Guardian.
  • Ernst Brücke. From The British Medical Journal and jstor.org.
  • The Philosophical and Cultural Interests of the Biophysics Movement of 1847[dead link]. From oxfordjournals.org.
  • The personal and scientific feud between Ernst Brücke and Josef Hyrtl. From NCBI.
  • The Physiological Circus: Knowing, Representing, and Training Horses in Motion in Nineteenth-Century France. From jstor.org.

ernst, wilhelm, brücke, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ernst Wilhelm von Brucke news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ernst Wilhelm Ritter von Brucke 6 July 1819 7 January 1892 was a German physician and physiologist He is credited with contributions made in many facets of physiology Ernst Wilhelm von BruckeErnst von BruckeBorn 1819 07 06 6 July 1819BerlinDied7 January 1892 1892 01 07 aged 72 ViennaNationalityGermanKnown forPsychodynamicsScientific careerFieldsPhysiologyInfluencedSigmund Freud Contents 1 Biography 2 Research 3 Ideology 3 1 Principles 3 2 Feud 3 3 Debate 4 Selected works 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditHe was born Ernst Wilhelm Brucke in Berlin 1 He graduated in medicine at the University of Berlin in 1842 2 and during the following year he became a research assistant to Johannes Peter Muller In 1845 he founded the Physikalische Gesellschaft Physical Society in Berlin together with Emil Du Bois Reymond Hermann von Helmholtz and others in the house of physicist Heinrich Gustav Magnus Later on this became known as the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft German Society of Physics In 1846 Brucke was elected teacher of anatomy in the Akademie der Bildenden Kunste in Berlin Following that in 1848 he was appointed as professor of physiology at the University of Konigsberg replacing Karl Friedrich Burdach 1776 1847 In 1849 he acquired similar duties at the University of Vienna In 1873 Emperor Franz Joseph I honored Brucke with a noble title von Brucke but he rarely used it Ernst Fleischl von Marxow 1846 1891 and Joseph Paneth 1857 1890 two colleagues of Freud were assistants to Brucke in Vienna however Brucke is most noted for his influence on Sigmund Freud one of his other medical students Freud began studying under Brucke in 1877 and continued doing so until 1883 He was tasked to examine the biology of nervous tissue specifically comparing the brains of humans and other vertebrates to that of invertebrates Freud would many times call Brucke the professor who shaped him the most 3 This influence led to the development of the science of psychodynamics Brucke s teachings did not only influence Freud s work parts of the noted psychologist s theory were pulled directly from his professor s principles specifically the idea that all living things are dynamic and must bow to the laws of chemistry and physics Brucke retired from the University of Vienna in September 1890 and began working on a book he had long planned to write Beauty and the Flaws of the Human Stature which ended up being published as The Human Figure Its Beauties and Defects Research EditBrucke is remembered for his research on the nature of cells work dealing with the physiology of language investigations on the effect of electricity on muscles and studies of albumin He also made significant contributions in the fields of physics plant physiology microscopic anatomy and experimental physiology During Brucke s lifetime specialization was not popularized Because of this he had very diverse interests and made assorted contributions to the scientific community Early on in his career Brucke was interested in optics which led him to research the tapetum lucidum of the vertebrate eye and the action of the ciliary muscle Following that Brucke studied the eye s absorption of various light rays the mystery of color sensation and positive and negative afterimages His work in the science of optics was instrumental towards Helmholtz s invention of the ophthalmoscope Further investigation of this related subject found Brucke examining the color changes in chameleons and cephalopods then studying pigment cells and observing how muscular contraction is influenced by the duration of a stimulus Brucke also made contributions in a completely different discipline phonetics when he wrote one of his early works directed at teachers of the deaf Grundzuge der Physiologie und Systematik der Sprachlaute fur Linguisten und Taubstummenlehre In addition to optics cellular investigations and phonetics Brucke had a deep interest in philosophy and aesthetics which was demonstrated by his authorship of semi popular books specifically a work on the physiology of color in applied art Brucke s interest in color and the arts spread out from the scientific aspects of color into the industrial world as he laid down the principles of color combinations for the guidance of workers in fabrics From this he took the short step from color to artistic form and to the declaration of the underlying principles of what makes art beautiful Ideology EditPrinciples Edit Brucke was a positivist During his time it was not an organized school of thought but more a general attitude toward man nature and methods of investigation He and others who shared his beliefs wanted to bring the approach of the natural sciences in to the investigation of all human thought and action 4 Brucke delved deeply into his position on positivism in Lectures on Physiology a course that was published in 1876 5 While a medical student in Berlin along with his colleague Emil Du Bois Reymond Brucke condemned the ideas of pantheism all nature mysticism and all talk of occult divine forces manifesting themselves in the real world These superstitions contrasted directly with their principles of positivism and their more materialistic views of the world Later the two researchers along with Hermann von Helmholtz turned their sights against the popular philosophic theory of the time vitalism Vitalism is the idea that living things are only different from inanimate objects because they contain a vital spark which some believed to be the soul The three partners contested this theory stating that only the common physical chemical functions are involved in the life of an organism The alternate theory that the researchers did adhere to was one that became very popular in the coming years naturalism This theory fit perfectly with the beliefs of Brucke and his colleagues as it stated that everything comes from natural properties and sources Feud Edit Josef Hyrtl 1810 1894 was the head of the institute of anatomy at the University of Vienna and a strong believer in the vitalist theory He and Brucke initially got along well and it was Hyrtl s influence that allowed Brucke to be a professor at the University However the longer they worked in close quarters the less civil they became A feud started that would last throughout their academic careers Hyrtl was an older traditionalist with regards to physiology He was used to anatomy being the dominant method of medical teaching and training and Brucke challenged this with his newer version of physiology which was animal experimentation Brucke built a wooden hut to house dogs for his experiments in a location near both his and Hyrtl s apartments Hyrtl made complaints that the barking of the dogs was preventing him from sleeping and this may have been true however his real reason for complaining was the fact that he disliked Brucke s methods of investigation into physiology The feud expanded into a disagreement about the function of the semicircular canals of the inner ear Hyrtl believed that based on their shape the canals were used for directional hearing while Brucke having previous experimental knowledge about animals concluded that the semicircular canals of the inner ear were instead sensory organs for equilibrium This feud was a part of a deeper disagreement having to do with the two different philosophical viewpoints vitalism and naturalism that Hyrtl and Brucke followed Debate Edit In the Nineteenth century there was a debate about the inaccuracy in the way artists represented movement This was spurred by the invention of chronophotography and the assumption that this new technology would be able to change the habits of human and animal locomotion from a more aesthetic and conventional incorrect locomotion to a more natural one The debate was expanded to the idea that artists should make their representations such as paintings and sculptures in a way that accurately reflects the mechanics of the organism they are imitating For example artists painting a horse should paint the horse as frozen in a moment of movement that accurately reflects how a real horse moves instead of an aesthetic incorrect position Brucke disagreed with this idea He believed that artists should not be forced to contain the aesthetic of their art within parameters of reality and mechanics because the invention of chronophotography was an ineffective stimulus for changing the locomotion of humans and animals as it would not prompt the automatic correction of apparent impractical postures and movements To this end Brucke believed that there had been a decline in art ever since the artist endeavored to mimic perfect reality instead of seeking out beauty in its multitude of appearances Selected works EditUeber die Bewegungen der Mimosa pudica Archiv fur Anatomie Physiologie und wissenschaftliche Medicin 434 455 1848 On the movements of Mimosa pudica Beitrage zur vergleichenden Anatomie und Physiologie des Gefasssystems Denkschriften Akademie der Wissenschaften Wien Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Classe 3 335 367 1852 Contributions to the comparative anatomy and physiology of the vascular system Grundzuge der Physiologie und Systematik der Sprachlaute fur Linguisten und Taubstummenlehrer Wien C Gerold amp Sohn 1856 Fundamentals of physiology and classification of speech sounds for linguists and deaf teachers Die Elementarorganismen Sitzungsberichte der Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftlichen Classe der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften 44 381 406 1861 Elementary organisms Die Physiologie der Farben fur die Zwecke der Kunstgewerbe Leipzig S Hirzel 1866 The physiology of colors for the purposes of the arts Die physiologischen Grundlagen der neuhochdeutschen Verskunst Wien C Gerold amp Sohn 1871 Vorlesungen uber Physiologie Lectures on physiology 1 2 verm u verb Aufl 1875 Digital edition by the University and State Library Dusseldorf 1 Physiologie des Kreislaufs der Ernahrung der Absonderung der Respiration und der Bewegungserscheinungen 3 verm u verb Aufl 1881 Digital edition by the University and State Library Dusseldorf 2 Physiologie der Nerven und der Sinnesorgane und Entwickelungsgeschichte 2 verm u verb Aufl 1876 Digital edition by the University and State Library Dusseldorf 2 Physiologie der Nerven und der Sinnesorgane und Entwickelungsgeschichte 3 verm u verb Aufl 1884 Digital edition by the University and State Library Dusseldorf 2 S S 1886 Physiologie der Nerven und der Sinnesorgane und Entwickelungsgeschichte 4 verm u verb Aufl 1887 Digital edition by the University and State Library DusseldorfNotes EditRegarding personal names Ritter is a title translated approximately as Sir denoting a Knight not a first or middle name There is no equivalent female form References Edit Ernst Wilhelm von Brucke Artist Royal Academy of Arts www royalacademy org uk Retrieved 19 August 2020 IBBO International Biography and Bibliography of Ophthalmologists and Visual Scientist A Z Wayenborgh Publishing 30 November 2018 ISBN 978 90 6299 896 8 Gay Peter 1988 Freud A Life for our Time First ed New York amp London W W Norton amp Company p 106 ISBN 978 0 393 02517 0 Gay Peter 1988 Freud A Life for our Time First ed New York amp London W W Norton amp Company p 34 ISBN 978 0 393 02517 0 Gay Peter 1988 Freud A Life for our Time First ed New York amp London W W Norton amp Company p 36 ISBN 978 0 393 02517 0 External links Edit Media related to Ernst Wilhelm von Brucke at Wikimedia Commons Ernst Wilhelm Ritter von Brucke WhoNamedIt Biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science The Human Figure Its Beauties and Defects In the Preface by William Anderson Freud was a pioneering neuroscientist From the newspaper The Guardian Ernst Brucke From The British Medical Journal and jstor org The Philosophical and Cultural Interests of the Biophysics Movement of 1847 dead link From oxfordjournals org The personal and scientific feud between Ernst Brucke and Josef Hyrtl From NCBI The Physiological Circus Knowing Representing and Training Horses in Motion in Nineteenth Century France From jstor org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernst Wilhelm von Brucke amp oldid 1136173881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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