rationality, language, and the brain. darwin’s family tree

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Rationality, Language, and the Brain

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Page 1: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Rationality, Language, and the Brain

Page 2: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Darwin’s Family Tree

Page 3: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Francis Galton (1822-1911)

Eugenics (“well-born”):The attempt to improve the human race through

selective breeding

Page 4: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Galton’s Chart of notable persons withfamily member of talent

HEREDITARY GENIUS 1869

Page 5: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

GALTON’S CHART OF HEREDITARY GENIUS

Page 6: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

GALTON’S ANTHROPOMETRIC LABORATORY

Page 7: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

GALTON’S HEAD CALIPERS, 1882

Page 8: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree
Page 9: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Samuel Morton (1799-1850)

Crania Americana (1839)

Crania Aegyptica (1844)

Page 10: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Founded Société d’Anthropologie

in Paris 1859

first Anthropological Society

Page 11: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

(1871)

(1875)

Page 12: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

From Essays on AnthropologyPaul Broca

2 vols. (1871) p. 144

Stereograph for drawing

The shape of the skull(a tenth its natural size)

Page 13: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Compass to measure

micrometric thickness

From Essays on AnthropologyPaul Broca

2 vols. (1871) p. 153

Page 14: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

General Instructions for anthropological research and observationsPaul Broca, (1865)

Page 15: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Template for determination

of eye & skin color

Paul Broca Instructions générales pour

les recherches et observations anthropologiques

(1865)

Page 16: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Basque SkullsBrachyocephalic—

Broader, short-headedvs.

(Dolicocephalic—long-headed

Parisian skulls)

Mémoires D’AnthropologiePaul Broca, 1871

Page 17: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

from Étude sur le Cerveau du Gorille

(Study on the brainof a Gorilla)

Paul Broca (1878)

Page 18: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Brain of a young male chimpanzee (left)Brain of the Hottentot Venus (right)

Edmund Gurney, Henry Sedgwick & Frederick Myers

Page 19: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

“HOTTENTOT VENUS”

Page 20: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Report on Phineas Gage

Boston Post September, 1848

Page 21: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Tamping Iron

Page 22: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree
Page 23: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Phineas Gage’s Death Mask and Skull

Warren Anatomical Museum Countway Medical Library, Boston

Page 24: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

EDUARD HITZIG AND ELECTRICAL STIMULATION OF THE DOG’S BRAIN

Page 25: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

David Ferrier (1843-1928) Localization of Function

Page 26: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

“ the most elevated cerebral faculties such as judgment, reflection, the faculties of comparison

and abstraction have their seat in the frontal convolutions, while convolutions of the temporal,

parietal and occipital lobes are affected by sentiments, predilections and passions.”

Broca (1861) p. 57.

Page 27: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Brain of Leborgne“Tan”

Broca’s patientDiagnosed with aphemia

(loss of speech)also called aphasia

Diagram of Broca’s area—Third frontal convolution

Page 28: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree
Page 29: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

JOHN HUGHLINGS JACKSON (1835-1911)

Page 30: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

“If this be the process of evolution, then the reverse process of dissolution is not only a ‘taking off’ of the higher, but is at the very same time a ‘letting go’ of the lower. If the governing body of this country were destroyed suddenly, we should have two causes for lamentation: 1) the loss of services of eminent men; and 2) the anarchy of the now uncontrolled people.”

John Hughlings Jackson (1887)

Page 31: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

General Paralysis Success Story• 1896 German pathologist Franz Nissl

diagnoses general pareses on basis of cellular pathological evidence

• c. 1898 Richard von Krafft-Ebing injects fluid from sores of known syphilitics into the blood of general pareses patients. It is assumed that they are already infected

• 1905 Franz Schaudinn demonstrates presence of Treponema palidum, a microorganism, in the primary lesions of syphilis.

Page 32: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

General Paralysis Success Story, cont.

• 1906 August von Wasserman develops first immunological test for the diagnosis of syphilis

• 1910 Paul Ehrlich develops Salvarsan (Number 606, the ‘magic bullet’) for the treatment of syphilis and neurosyphilis, or what used to be called general paralysis.

Page 33: Rationality, Language, and the Brain. Darwin’s Family Tree

Disease Models of the Brain-late 1800s

• Dissolution—higher brain levels impaired, releasing activity of less evolved brain areas,

• Localization—destruction of certain localized cerebral areas

• Germ Theory--microorganism invades the brain and causes disease