Budge Gavin
Clio Med. 2014;94:267-92.
The widespread influence exerted by the medical theories of Scottish doctor, John Brown, whose eponymously named Brunonianism radically simplified the ideas of his mentor, William Cullen, has not been generally recognised. However, the very simplicity of the Brunonian medical model played a key role in ensuring the dissemination of medical ideas about nervous irritability and the harmful effects of overstimulation in the literary culture of the nineteenth century and shaped early sociological thinking. This chapter suggests the centrality of these medical ideas, as mediated by Brunonianism, to the understanding of Romanticism in the nineteenth century, and argues that Brunonian ideas shaped nineteenth-century thinking about the effects of mass print culture in ways which continue to influence contemporary thinking about the effects of media.
苏格兰医生约翰·布朗的医学理论产生了广泛影响,其以他的名字命名的布朗医学说极大地简化了他的导师威廉·卡伦的思想,但这种影响尚未得到普遍认可。然而,布朗医学模型的极度简化在确保有关神经兴奋性以及过度刺激的有害影响的医学观念在19世纪文学文化中的传播方面发挥了关键作用,并塑造了早期的社会学思想。本章指出,经布朗医学说传播的这些医学观念对于理解19世纪的浪漫主义至关重要,并认为布朗医学观念以持续影响当代关于媒体效应思考的方式塑造了19世纪关于大众印刷文化影响的思维。