Wade Nicholas J
Department of Psychology University of Dundee, Scotland.
J Hist Neurosci. 2005 Mar;14(1):11-5. doi: 10.1080/096470490512544.
In 1789, at a meeting of a small London society for the promotion of medical and surgical knowledge, Andrew Marshal (1742-1813) and John Hunter (1728-1793) engaged in heated debate regarding the association between mania and the structure of the brain. Marshal claimed to have observed abnormalities when dissecting brains of those who died insane and Hunter denied this connection. At the next meeting a scuffle between them ensued and they had to be parted. Although Marshal did not publish his observations during his lifetime, they were assembled by his assistant in 1815. Marshal's descriptions of the brains of hydrophobics and maniacs are worthy of note.
1789年,在伦敦一个促进医学与外科学知识的小型社团的会议上,安德鲁·马歇尔(1742 - 1813)和约翰·亨特(1728 - 1793)就躁狂症与大脑结构之间的关联展开了激烈辩论。马歇尔声称在解剖死于精神错乱者的大脑时观察到了异常情况,而亨特否认这种联系。在下次会议上,他们之间发生了扭打,不得不被分开。尽管马歇尔在生前没有发表他的观察结果,但这些观察结果在1815年由他的助手整理出来。马歇尔对狂犬病患者和躁狂症患者大脑的描述值得关注。