Camillo Golgi (1843-1926) is widely regarded as one of the founders of modern neuroscience. In 1873 he discovered the reazione nera - the black reaction - a histological stain which was to prove to be a revolutionary method for studying the structure of the nervous system. To this day, the Golgi stain is still widely used. For every student of medicine or biology, Golgis name is synonymous with one of the basic structures in the cell:: Golgi Apparatus, a cellular structureinvolved in protein glycosylation and transport. Golgi discovered the apparatus in 1898, and as a result of which, he is probably the most widely cited biologist in the scientific literature. But this is only one of Golgis many contributions to scientific research. Amongst other things, he devised asystem for the classification of neurons on the basis of axonal distribution, and identified a type of cell in the cerebellum. He identified and described the malarial cycle in the human. His discoveries were both basic, and rich with therapeutic implications. His remarkable achievements earned him a Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1906. It is enough to open any book of biology or medicine to realize that Golgi is one of the giants of 19th Century scientific endeavour. Despite this,Golgi remains a relatively unknown figure in the history of neuroscience and cell biology. This long-awaited biography, in a new translation from the Italian, is a fascinating analysis of Golgis experiments, ideas, and personal life. It will be welcomed by anyone who has ever wondered about this brilliant Italianscientist and his seminal contributions to the fields of neuroscience, cytology and cell biology, pathology, and biochemistry today.
Preface; Introduction:: Between revolution and conservatism; From the mountains of Valcamonica to the University of Pavia; The University of Pavia medical school before Golgi; The morphological choice; A small circle of Dante; The black silhouette; Neurohistology and neurophysiology before the black reaction; Finding a way out of the labyrinth; Professor at Pavia; The structure of the central nervous system; Controversies and various studies; The secret of the intermittent fevers; The prophets of the neuron; Seemingly a matter of priority; Protoplasmic pantheism; Golgi versus Cajal:: holism versus reductionism at the dawn of the neurosciences; A tranquil laboratory life; The threat from Milan; The Golgi Apparatus; The laboratory where a discovery is made every day; Siamese twins joined at the shoulder; Back to research; The veil of Isis; Working unto death;
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