Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The relations of mind and brain / by Henry Calderwood. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
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![brain disease, 384 ; treatment of in- sanity, 387 ; violent injury to the healthy brain, 393 ; how insanity maj' be induced, 402 ; how averted, 409. Brain work, and the weariness which it induces, 326 ; difiference between, aud mental work, 327. Bridgman, Laura, case of, 296. Broca on Aphasia, 288 ; connected with left hemisphere, 304 ; case of, 309. Brown, Prof. Crum, on rotatory motion as affecting the semicircular canals of the ear, 73. Brown, Dr. John, on superiority of the dog among animals, 137. Brown-S4quard, on pathological aspects of brain injury, 365. Browne, Dr., on impairment of speech, 305 ; case of, 308 ; cure of brain wast^ ing, 383 ; small amount of thought in ordinary work, 385 ; effects of emotion on brain, 387. Burdon-Sanderson, Dr., on electric exci- tation of brain, 105. Braun on incision into grey matter, 105. Bruer on rotatory motion, 73. Buckland, Francis T., on foot of the monkey, 90. Buffon on intelligence of the ape, 170. Calderwood, E,ev. H., on intelligence of horse, 144. Campbell, Lord, weight of his brain, 23. Cardonna’s (Prof.), case of microcephaly, 369. Carp, brain of, 125. Carpenter on reunion of parts of a cut nerve, 52 ; diameter of nerve fibre, 63; unconscious cerebration, 116; on Ascidian MollusJc, 123; on “hp-read- ing,” 293. Carville and Duret’s experiments, 82, 104. Cat, brain of, 132. Cells of the grey matter, 25 ; different forms of, 26 ; their aspects in different layers of the grey matter, 27; action of, 193. Central lobe, 35. Centres ot sensation and motion in the brain of the monkey, 86 ; of the dog, 97. Cerebellum, functions of, 163. Chalmers, weight of his brain, 23. Chimpanzee, weight of brain of, 13; structure of, 159. Christison, Sir Robert, report on the hrain of Lord Jeffrey, 23. Clarke, Dr. Lockhart, on nerve cells, 27. Clouston, Dr., examples of disordered brain, 377. Comparative brain structure: brain of carp, 125; of frog, 127; of pigeon, 127 ; of rat, 129 ; of rabbit, 130 ; of cat, 132 ; of dog, 133; of horse, 141; of monkey, 150; of ape, 154; of man, 152, 155 ; of elephant, 175; of whale, 181. Conceptions, 223; their relation to per- ception and to hrain, 223. Configuration of the brain, 14. Connecting band uniting the two hemi- spheres of the brain, 29. Consciousness, reliability of, 4. Contractihty of muscular tissue, 79, 251. Convolutions of grey matter, differently arranged in the two hemispheres, 19 ; complexity of, 23. Cornea, 60. Corpus callosum, 29; absence of, 372. Corpus striatum, 31. Corpuscles connected with nerves of touch, 42 ; sensitiveness of, 192. Cranial nerves, 39. Crystalline lens, 61. Cutting a nerve fibre, effects of, 52. Cuvier, weight of his brain, 23. Darwin on brain as the measure of mind,- 8. Davis, Dr. Barnard, on diversity of cranium with different races, 367. Dax on loss of speech, 304. Deaf-mutes, education of, 292 ; examples of, 295. De Morny, weight of his hrain, 23. De Quincey, tendencies in dreaming, 342. Des Cartes on our conception of an Ab- solute Being, 433. Dickens on Laura Bridgman’s case, 298. Dirichlet, weight of his brain, 23. Discrimination essential to human ex- perience, 220. Disturbed bodily condition, influence on mind, 315. Divine existence, recognition of, 435 ; relation of physical and moral exist- ence to, 435. Dodds, Dr., on localisation of function.^, ] 04 ; anatomical aspects of the ques-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b2196922x_0468.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


