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Journal ArticleDOI

Areview of analogies between some neuroanatomical terms and roman household objects

TLDR
This paper aims to identify the origin of eight Latin terms (pulvinar, capsula, infundibulum, operculum, flocculus, forceps, falx, habenula), and analyzed the etymology of these Latin neuroanatomical terms in brief.
Abstract
Wishing to contribute to an easier remembrance of the name, shape, location and function of some neuroanatomical structures, this paper aims to identify the origin of eight Latin terms (pulvinar, capsula, infundibulum, operculum, flocculus, forceps, falx, habenula). Therefore, we analyzed the etymology of these Latin neuroanatomical terms in brief, and searched the possible correlations between the shape of different household objects used in Roman Antiquity and the shape of neuroanatomical structures bearing those names. We also perused the literature to identify the first anatomist who made such an analogy when searching to give a name to the anatomical structure he had discovered at dissection, as well as the time context of his discovery. We found knowledge of few neuroanatomical structures tracing their origin to Antiquity, but most of the nervous structures we have studied were discovered in the 19th century, when the German school of anatomy played a distinctive part. However, the multitude of Latin words designating neuroanatomical structures by analogy is an undeniable proof of neuroanatomists' amazing imagination.

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Farm Equipment of the Roman World

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a list of plates made of basketry: Introduction 7. Hard basketry 8. Soft basketry 9. Utensils made of Earthenware, Stone, Metal, Wood and Leather Part IV.
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The "polymorphous" history of a polymorphous skull bone: the sphenoid.

TL;DR: The reader is taken on a journey through time and space, charting the evolution of anatomists’ comprehension of sphenoid bone morphology from antiquity to its conception as a bone structure in the eighteenth century, and ranging from ancient Greece to modern Italy and France.
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The history of optic chiasm from antiquity to the twentieth century

TL;DR: The history of the optic chiasm is a fascinating time travel displaying the conceptual transformations that have been made in anatomy and medicine by the authors' forerunners.
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The Edinburgh Critical History of Nineteenth-Century Philosophy

TL;DR: Goggi as mentioned in this paper pointed out that Diderot's strong commitment to individual autonomy and freedom from social and political interference, whether for the individual's good or ill, and his equally forceful endorsement of the right of private property, with the important proviso as to what can never be legitimately acquired: another human being.
Journal ArticleDOI

An unwritten anatomy lesson: The influence of Roman clothing on neuroanatomical terminology: In memoriam Albert L. Rhoton, Jr. (1932–2016)

TL;DR: Through their apparel, the Romans influenced the Terminologia Anatomica and “clothed” the structures of the brain and spinal cord, making them immortal.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The primate pulvinar nuclei : vision and action

TL;DR: The pulvinar nuclei of the thalamus are proportionately larger in higher mammals, particularly in primates, and account for a quarter of the total mass, and deal with higher-order visual and visuomotor transduction.

Traite d'anatomie descritive

TL;DR: Theologie, Arthrologie, Organes des sens - t.4.
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