Franz Joseph Gall

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Franz Joseph Gall was a late Eighteenth/ early Nineteenth Century neuroscientist who believed that mental functions are localized in discrete parts of the brain, and is famous for founding the notorious pseudoscience of phrenology. That fact is unfortunate for his reputation, as he also directly influenced the advance of neuroscience, carrying out meticulous dissections of the brain and spinal cord.


Dr. Franz Joesph Gall was German, "born in Tiefenbrunn, in Baden, and obtaining his medical doctorate in Vienna in 1785". (reference for quote: Donald Simpson: PHRENOLOGY AND THE NEUROSCIENCES: CONTRIBUTIONS OF F. J. GALL AND J. G. SPURZHEIM. COWLISHAW SYMPOSIUM. ANZ J. Surg. 2005; 75 : 475–482). Apparently, he noticed a correlation between excellent verbal memories and very large eyes in his classmates in childhood, and used this correlation in his later thinking about the brain. As a physician, he took every opportunity to palpate the skulls of individuals with decided talents or tendicies; including artists, criminals, the insane, and recorded his findings. He collected both actual skulls and plaster casts of the skulls of his subjects in order to refine his data.

At the same time as Gall, and his student , were elaborating the principles of phrenology, they were also furthering the infant disciplines of neuropathology and neuroanatomy. They established methods of preserving the brain in fixatives, and dissected out tracts within the Central Nervous System. They accurately described white matter of the brain as consisting of fibers.