Abstract
THE human brain is the instrument of the high powers of intelligence that distinguish man from all other living creatures. The secret of man's most distinctive attribute is hidden in the texture of his brain, and perhaps will never be fully revealed. Yet from time to time, with the growth of knowledge and the discovery of new methods of approach, we can profitably return to this greatest of all biological problems and get new glimpses of the factors that have made man what he is. Two considerations make the present time appropriate for taking stock of the state of our knowledge of these matters. The emergence of a clearer understanding of the sequence of structural changes in the brain and body of man's ancestors enables us to interpret the physiological factors involved in the widening and deepening of the intellectual powers and to appreciate the conditions essential for the attainment of-such mental growth. In the second place, the new points of view regarding the functions of the cerebral cortex that have emerged from Dr. Henry Head's suggestive clinical investigations prompt one to examine the brain anew and endeavour to integrate the results of his brilliant analysis with those revealed in the study of the evolution of the brain. Whether or not it is yet possible fully to correlate the facts and conclusions of these two disciplines into one coherent body of doctrine, it is well worth while to make the attempt to do so, if for no other reason than to direct attention to new problems that call for solution.
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References
Discourse delivered at the Royal Institution on Friday, February 22.
E. R. A. Serres, “Anatomie comparée du Cerveau”, Paris, 1827, t. ii. p. 583.
See, for example, the “Study of Man”, NATURE, September 22, 1923.
W. H. R. Rivers, Schäfer's “Text-book of Physiology”, vol. ii. p. 1132.
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SMITH, G. The Human Brain. Nature 113, 390–393 (1924). https://doi.org/10.1038/113390a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/113390a0