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Introduction |
The ancient Greeks were divided as to the respective roles of the heart and the brain. Some philosophers, such as Homer and Aristotle, believed that the heart was the seat in which intelligence resided. This idea persisted for many years - even in the seventeenth century, Descartes felt that the flow of blood from the heart to the brain served the purpose of producing "animal spirits" which animated the body.
Galileo, in 1623, put forward the view that
science should only be concerned with primary qualities, those
of the external world that could be measured or weighed. So-called
secondary qualities, such as love, beauty, meaning and value,
were said to lie outside the realm of science. Descartes, himself,
supported this idea and proposed two categories: mind and
matter. The matter category related to physical or extended
substance, the mind category to thinking substance - that which is
unextended and indivisible.
These philosophers and scientists thus distinguished the physical operation of the brain from the thought process. While the former was thought to be amenable to scientific study, consciousness was excluded from the scientific world-view. It is only recently that researchers have begun to challenge this mind/matter split with evidence that many human qualities traditionally associated with the mind, such as personality, are, at least in part, determined by biochemistry. Some researchers believe that consciousness itself may emerge as a by-product of the complex workings of the human brain.
A major impetus to the study of the physical workings of the brain
came in 1791, when Galvani showed that electricity existed as a force
within the body - in fact, inside the brain cells. He showed in a
sequence of experiments that it was possible to control the motor
nerves of frogs using electrical currents.
(The novel
"Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley is testament to the flurry of
public interest in this new research.) However, Galvani did not have
the technology to measure the currents involved in the body; they were
too small. His experiments were later confirmed by Du Bois-Reymond in
1850, who found that neurons emit pulses of electricity that travel at
around 200 mph. Purkinje, in 1838, found that nerve cells consist of
two parts: a nucleus similar to other cells and a set of fibers which
emanated out from the nucleus - these were later identified as the axons and dendrites. In 1870, Golgi
made the observation that there were literally billions of neurons
making up the central nervous system and established that the neurons
in the brain sent information to the motor nerves and that information
from the sensory nerves was sent to the brain for analysis.
In the early 1900's, Adrian, Gasser and Erianger found that the electrical pulses within the neurons caused chemicals to be released, the function of which was to send a message to other neurons using the connections between them and that it took one-thousandth of a second for the neuron to recharge after this firing process had taken place.
These initial discoveries paved the way for modern neuroscience which in recent years has yielded enormous amounts of information about the physical functions of the brain.