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Creator (Definite): Francis Xavier DercumDate: 1896
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Cited by S.E. Black, '"The Osler Medal Essay": Pseudopods and Synapses: The Amoeboid Theories of Neuronal Mobility and the Early Formation of the Synapse Concept', Bulletin of the History of Medicine 55 (1981), pp. 34-58.
Description:'The American neurologist, Francis Xavier Dercum (1856-1931) in his presidential address to the American Neurological Association in 1896, [note: 'F.X. Dercum, "The functions of the neuron," J. Nerv. Ment. Dis., 1896, 21: 518-23.'] heralded the amoeboid hypothesis as the new basis for a "rational and biological psychology," and showed how it could elucidate many clinical features of hysteria and hypnosis.' (45)
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Quoted by Henri Bergson's Physiological Psychology: Vitalism and Organicism at the Start of the Twentieth Century
Description:'Adherents of cellularly-distinct conceptions of neuronal connection portrayed them as confirming associationist contentions regarding the nature of psychology. For example, US physician Francis Xavier Dercum argued that the 'amoeboid' expansion and retraction of individual cells underlay variously: hysteria; hypnotic and dream states; sleep; and trains of thought themselves. These latter, Dercum contended, appeared 'to follow purely mechanical lines' of association and disassociation between the sense impressions that they carried.'