140 BIOLOGY AND ITS MAKERS 



But when the broad generalization, llial all the tissues of 

 animals and plants are com])osed of cells, was given to the 

 world by Schleiden and Schwann, in 1838-39, the entire or- 

 ganization of living forms took on a new aspect. This was 

 progress in understanding the morphology of animals and 

 plants. 



Protoplasm. — With improved microscopes and attention 

 directed to cells, it was not long before the discovery was 

 made that the cells as units of structure contain protoplasm. 

 That this substance is similar in plants and animals and is 

 the seat of all vital activitv was determined chieflv bv the 

 researches of ^lax Schultze, published in 1861. Thus step 

 by step, from 1758, the date of the tenth edition of the 

 Sy sterna A^afurce, to 1861, there was a progress on the mor- 

 phological side, passing from the organism as a whole to 

 organs, to tissues, to cells, and Imally to protoplasm, the study 

 of which in all its phases is the chief pursuit of biologists. 



The physiological side had a parallel development. In 

 the period of Linnaeus, the physiology of the organism was 

 investigated by Haller and his school; following him the 

 physiology of organs and tissues was advanced by J. Miiller, 

 Bichat, and others. Later, Virchow investigated the physiol- 

 ogy of cells, and Claude Bernard the chemical activities of 

 protoplasm. 



This set forth in outline will be amplified in the follow- 

 ing chapters. 



l.' 



