THE RISE OF PHYSIOLOGY i8 







His chief service of permanent value was that he brought 

 into one work all the facts and the chief theories of physiology 

 carefully arranged and digested. This, as has been said, 

 made physiology an independent branch of science, to be 

 pursued for itself and not merely as an adjunct to the study 

 of medicine. The w^ork referred to is his Elements of Ph\si- 

 ology {Elemcnta PhysiologicB Corporis Humani, 1758), one 

 of the noteworthy books marking a distinct epoch in the 

 progress of science. 



To the period of Haller also belongs the discovery of 

 oxygen, in 1774, by Priestley, a discovery which was destined 

 to have profound influence upon the subsequent development 

 of physiology, so that even now physiology consists largely 

 in tracing the way in which oxygen enters the body, the 

 manner in which it is distributed to the tissues, and the vari- 

 ous phases of vital activity that it brings about within the 

 living tissues. 



Charles Bell.— The period of Haller may be considered 

 as extending beyond his lifetime and as terminating when the 

 influence of Miiller began to be felt. Another discovery com- 

 ing in the closing years of Haller's period marks a capital 

 advance in physiology. I refer to the discovery of Charles 

 Bell (i 774-1842) showing that the nerve fibers of the anterior 

 roots of the spinal cord belong to the motor type, while those 

 of the posterior roots belong to the sensory type. 



This great truth w^as arrived at theoretically, rather than 

 as the result of experimental demonstration. It was first ex- 

 pounded by Bell in 181 1 in a small essay entitled Idea oj a 

 New Anatomy oj the Brain, which was printed for jjrivate 

 distribution. It was expanded in his papers, beginning in 

 182 1, and published in the Philosophical Transactions of 

 the Royal Society of London, and finally embodied in his 

 work on the nervous system, published in 1830. At this 

 latter date Johannes Miiller had reached the age of twenty- 



