10,993 research outputs found

    What Ever happened to Francis Glisson? Albrecht Haller and the Fate of Eighteenth-Century Irritability

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    This article investigates the reasons behind the disappearance of Francis Glisson’s theory of irritability during the eighteenth century. At a time when natural investigations were becoming increasingly polarized between mind and matter in the attempt to save both man’s consciousness and the inert nature of the res extensa, Glisson’s notion of a natural perception embedded in matter did not satisfy the new science’s basic injunction not to superimpose perceptions and appetites on nature. Knowledge of nature could not be based on knowledge within nature, i.e., on the very knowledge that nature has of itself; or – to look at the same question from the point of view of the human mind – man’s consciousness could not be seen as participating in forms of natural selfhood. Albrecht Haller played a key role in this story. Through his experiments, Haller thought he had conclusively demonstrated that the response given by nature when irritated did not betray any natural perceptivity, any inner life, any sentiment interi´eur. In doing so, he provided a less bewildering theory of irritability for the rising communities of experimental physiology

    Haller, G.

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    Panorame du St. Bernard, dessiné d'après nature par G. Studer de Berne et lithographié par F. Schmid

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    Panorama vom Pointe de Drône aus aufgenommendess. G. Studer, le 3e Août 1825 ; lith. et imp. en taille-douce de Haller à BerneUmschlagtitelblatt: Ansicht der Passhöhe des Grossen St. BernhardRückendeckel, innen: handkolorierte Ansicht "Vue de l'Hospice de Mont St-Bernard", sowie Namenschild: "May de Buren"Aus der Sammlung Johann Müller-Wegmann; Depositum der SAC Sektion Uto in der Zentralbibliothek des SA

    Memo from Fred J. Haller, Heart Mountain Project Steward, to Block Manager, April 24, 1944

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    Memorandum of understanding from Fred J. Haller to Block Manager regarding new process for baby formula at Heart Mountain incarceration camp.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications

    Anatomy. A von Haller.

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/342380Variation on section heading: Body. Author: Albrecht von Haller. Specialty: philospoher, physiologist. Notes: La differences des sexes ( p.97) Cette difference… Back of card - reference continued in French.138832 item: [2014.0039.00543] "Anatomy. A von Haller.

    Cymothoa paradoxa Haller 1880

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    <p> <i>paradoxa</i> Haller, 1880: 378 -380 [<i>Cymothoa</i>].</p> <p>Indischer Ocean. One ♀.</p> <p> The MHNG collection includes one specimen in alcohol under the name <i>Cymothoa paradoxa</i>. The vial containing the specimen has the typewritten label “ Cymothoa paradoxa HALLER, holotype transféré en alcool 18.IV.1985” and a label handwritten in pencil “Don de Dr G Haller, Cymothoa paradoxa Hall. Dans la bouche d’une caranx carangus Bloch. Malabar. Trouvé par G Lunel”. This label has three holes, having been folded and secured on a pin, and has been sealed in protective plastic. Haller stated that the specimen came from the mouth of a <i>Caranx carangus</i> Bloch, 1793. This is a junior synonym of <i>C. hippos</i> (Linnaeus, 1766), a fish with an Atlantic distribution; the host was probably the Indian Ocean species <i>C. ignobilis</i> (Forsskål, 1775). Haller also stated that had he had more specimens he would probably have erected a new genus for this species. <i>Cymotha paradoxa</i> was placed in the synonymy of <i>Enispa irregularis</i> (Bleeker, 1857) by Bruce (1990). This specimen is the holotype.</p> <p> <i>Cymothoa paradoxa</i> Haller, 1880</p>Published as part of <i>John Hollier, 2017, The type specimens of parasitic marine isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothooidea) described by Henri de Saussure and Gottfried Haller deposited in the Muséum d'histoire naturelle de Genève, pp. 183-186 in Revue suisse de Zoologie 124 (1)</i> on page 185, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/322676">10.5281/zenodo.322676</a&gt

    Analekten für die Litteratur / Von Gotthold Ephraim Leßing. [Hrsg. von J. G. Heinzmann]

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    Vorlageform der Veröffentlichungsangabe: Bern und Leipzig, in der Hallerschen BuchhandlungErschienen: Theil 1 - 4 und Beylag

    Kiri G. K. Springsfeld'ile

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    Haller, Albrecht von, 1708-1777, šveitsi loodusteadlane ja arstSpringsfeld, Gottlob Karl, 1714-1772, meedikErialased küsimuse

    Letter to Dr. George L. Haller re: attached letter from second author in praise of L.--Correspondence

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    Letter to Dr. George L. Haller re: attached letter from second author in praise of L. D. Miles' contribution to the Value Engineering Conference held in Boston

    'de Haller Cereal.'

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    Illustrations for Haller, A. de. 1776. Genera, Species et Varietates Cerealium. "Novi commentarii Societatis Regiae Scientiarum Got". Vol. 6, Tab. II, III and IV. Illustrations of species of the genera "Hordeum" and "Avena". Artist unknown. Signed 'Sturm sc. Nberg' and 'J. G. Sturm sc', probably J. G. Sturm in Nuremberg
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