Remy

11%
Flag icon
By the seventeenth century, however, this vision of a kind of dispersed intelligence was waning in the face of the new anatomical discoveries being made by scientists like Thomas Willis. Often credited as the founder of modern neuroscience, Willis spent his career examining the brain in ever more minute detail, mapping its vast neural networks and complex muscle structures, and eventually publishing his findings in a 1664 treatise titled Cerebri anatome.
Rumbles: A Curious History of the Gut: The Secret Story of the Body's Most Fascinating Organ
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview