1 [William Cullen, see Chapter 17, note 39, above.]
2 [Robert Whytt, see Volume 3, Lesson 12, note 28.]
3 [Institutions of Medicine (Edinburgh: [s. n.], 1772, 255 p., in-octavo). For the use of the students in the University of Edinburgh.]
4 [Institutions of Medicine [third edition, corrected]. Edinburgh: Charles Elliot & T. Cadell, 1785, 240 p.]
5 [Physiologie de M. Cullen, M.D., traduite de l’anglais sur la troisième et dernière édition, par M. Bosquillon. Paris: T. Barrois jeune, 1785, viii + 207 + [1] p. Edouard François Marie Bosquillon (born 20 March 1744, Montdidier; died 21 November 1814, Paris), a French physician, Hellenist, and translator, who entered the Jesuit school in Paris at the age of eleven and quickly distinguished himself in Greek. He pursued studies in philosophy at the University of Paris and was awarded a master of arts in 1762. He then went on to study medicine eventually becoming doctor-regent and professor of Latin surgery at the Faculty of Medicine in Paris. He became known for his translations of major works in medicine, especially those by William Cullen (see Chapter 17, note 39, above). As a medical practitioner, Bosquillon was distinguished above all by an unusual boldness in the use of bloodletting, which he made the basis for the treatment of most all diseases.]
6 [Ernst Platner, see Chapter 17, note 79, above.]
7 [De vi corporis in memoria, specimen primum, cerebri in apprehendendis et retinendis ideis officium sistens. Leipzig: Ex Officina Breitkopfia, 1767, [5] + 50 p.]
8 [De vi corporis in memoria, specimen secundum pathologiam ad cognoscendas memoriae vicissitudines necessariam sistens. Leipzig: Ex Officina Breitkopfia, 1767, 54 + [2] p.]
9 [David Hartley, see Volume 3, Lesson 14, note 21.]
10 [Charles Bonnet, see Volume 3, Lesson 2, note 6.]
11 [Anima quo sensu crescere dicatur prolusio, qua scholas philosophicas aperit Ernestus Platner. Leipzig: Breitkopf, 1768, xiv p.]
12 [Briefe eines Arztes an seinen Freund über den menschlichen Körper. Leipzig: C. Fritsch, 1770‑1771, 2 vols, xxx+ 477 p.; lxxvii + 469 p.]
13 [Anthropologie für Aerzte und Weltweise, Mit besonderer Rücksicht auf Physiologie, Pathologie, Moralphilosophie und Aesthetik. Leipzig: Dyckischen Buchhandlung, 1772, xxviii + 291 + [7] p.]
14 [Neue Anthropologie für Aerzte und Weltweise, Mit besonderer Rücksicht auf Physiologie, Pathologie, Moralphilosophie und Aesthetik. Leipzig: Siegfried Lebrecht Crusius, 1790, [31] + 664 p.]
15 [Quaestiones physiologicae. Leipzig: Siegfried Lebrecht Crusius, 1794, [3] + 285 + [1] p.]
16 [Georg Prochaska, see Chapter 17, note 80, above.]
17 [De carne musculari tractatus anatomico-physiologicus tabulis aeneis illustratus. Vienna: Rudolph Graefer, 1778, [12] + 136 p., 6 pls.]
18 [De structura nervorum, tractatus anatomicus tabulis aeneis illustratus. Vienna: Rudolph Graefer, 1779, [7] + 137 + [1] p., 7 pls.]
19 [“De functionibus systematis nervosa.” Adnotationum academicarum, fasciculus tertius, 1784, pp. 1‑164.]
20 [Institutiones physiologiae humanae, in usum suarum praelectionum conscriptarum. Vienna: Christ. Fried. Wappler & Beck, 1805‑1806, 2 vols, [3] + 239 p.; [5] + 243 + [1] p.]
21 [Johann Christian Reil (born 20 February 1759, Rhaude, Rhauderfehn; died 22 November 1813, Halle an der Saale), a German physician, physiologist, anatomist, and psychiatrist, educated in medicine in Göttingen. From 1788 to 1810, he worked in a hospital in Halle, Germany, where he developed a medical program based heavily on Naturphilosophie. In 1795, he established the first journal of physiology in German, the Archiv für die Physiologie. In 1810, he became one of the first university teachers of psychiatry when appointed professor of medicine in Berlin. He died on 22 November 1813 from typhus contracted while treating the wounded in the Battle of Leipzig, later known as the Battle of the Nations, one of the most severe confrontations of the Napoleonic Wars.]
22 [Exercitationum anatomicarum fasciculus primus de structura nervorum, tribus tabulis aeneis illustratus. Halae Saxonum: Curtiana Venalis, 1796, [vi] + 32 p., 3 pls.]
23 [Johann Ernst Neubauer (born 1742, Giessen; died 30 January 1777, Jena), a German physician and anatomist, who initially devoted his studies to languages, mathematics, and drawing, but later turned to the study of anatomy, earning his doctorate in medicine at Giessen in 1767. In 1769, he was called to Jena to take over the position of the ill anatomy professor Carl Friedrich Kaltschmied (born 21 May 1706, Breslau; died 6 November 1769, Jena). After Kaltschmied’s death, Neubauer was appointed full professor of anatomy, but by 1772 he was unable to teach due to an illness that led to his premature death five years later.]
24 [Descriptio anatomica nervorum cardiacorum, sectio prima de nervo intercostali cervicali, dextriimprimis lateris. Leipzig; Jena: Officina Fleischeriana, 1772, 230 p., 3 pls.]
25 [Johann Gottlieb Walter (born 1 July 1734, Königsberg; died 4 January 1818, Berlin), a German physician and anatomist, educated initially in Königsberg and Berlin. In 1757, he was awarded a medical degree at Frankfurt-on-Oder. In 1774, he became professor of anatomy in Berlin. He built a large collection of anatomical specimens that became the foundation for the anatomical-zoological museum of the Berlin Academy.]
26 [Tabulae nervorum thoracis et abdominis. Berlin: George Jacob Decker, 1783, [6] + 17 p., 4 pls.]
27 [Antonio Scarpa, see Volume 3, Lesson 15, note 66.]
28 [Tabulae neurologicae ad illustrandam historiam anatomicam cardiacorum nervorum, noni nervorum cerebri. Pavia: Balthasar Comini, 1794, 14 life-size pls.]
29 [Anatomicae disquisitiones de auditu et olfactu. Ticini: Petri Galeatii, 1789, [x] + 101 p., 16 pls.]