Gross C G
Department of Psychology, Princeton University, New Jersey 08544-1010.
Hippocampus. 1993 Oct;3(4):403-15. doi: 10.1002/hipo.450030403.
In mid-19th century Britain the possibility of evolution and particularly the evolution of man from apes was vigorously contested. Among the leading antievolutionists was the celebrated anatomist and paleontologist Richard Owen and among the leading defenders of evolution was Thomas Henry Huxley. The central dispute between them on human evolution was whether or not man's brain was fundamentally unique in having a hippocampus minor (known today as the calcar avis), a posterior horn in the lateral ventricle, and a posterior lobe. The author considers the background of this controversy, the origin and fate of the term hippocampus minor, why this structure became central to the question of human evolution, and how Huxley used it to support both Darwinism and the political ascendancy of Darwinians. The use of ventricular structures to distinguish humans from other animals appears to reflect an importance given to the ventricles that stretches back to ancient Greek medicine. This account illustrates both the extraordinary persistence of ideas in biology and the role of the political and social matrix in the study of the brain.
在19世纪中叶的英国,进化的可能性,尤其是人类从猿类进化而来的观点遭到了激烈的争论。著名解剖学家和古生物学家理查德·欧文是主要的反进化论者之一,而进化的主要捍卫者之一是托马斯·亨利·赫胥黎。他们在人类进化问题上的核心争议在于,人类的大脑在拥有小海马体(如今称为禽距)、侧脑室后角和后叶方面是否从根本上独一无二。作者探讨了这场争议的背景、小海马体这一术语的起源和命运、为何这一结构成为人类进化问题的核心,以及赫胥黎如何利用它来支持达尔文主义和达尔文主义者的政治优势。利用脑室结构来区分人类和其他动物,这似乎反映了自古希腊医学以来人们对脑室的重视。这一描述既说明了生物学中观念的非凡持久性,也说明了政治和社会环境在大脑研究中的作用。