CURING THE TERRIBLE DISEASES These drawings were made in 1902 by the German scientist Wilhelm Wundt.
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The purpose of this page is to present the written sources for the data presented at this website. There were many books that I read which I was unable to obtain an image for, including Amines & Schizophrenia, which was edited by Himwich & Kety. Another example was Research on the Etiology of Schizophrenia by G. Yu. Malis. The oldest book that I found very useful was Dementia Praecox and Paraphrenia by Emil Kraepelin. Another useful old book is Dementia Praecox, or the Group of Schizophrenias by Eugen Bleuler.
The one book that has influenced me the most is Orthomolecular Psychiatry edited by Hawkins & Pauling.
This cover comes from Alibris. Dr. Matthysse is a famous researcher in psychiatry. This is also true of Francine Benes, a researcher at McLean's Hospital. A picture of Benes is shown on the NARSAD web page. This book was published in 1996.
This cover of the book by Dr. Weintraub is from Alibris. ADD is Attention Deficit Disorder. Often these patients are hyperactive children.
Shown here is a young Linus Pauling in Germany. The reference is Profiles in Science, which is at www.profiles.nlm.nih.gov. Pauling was visiting Germany but lived in the United States.
This portrait of Alois Alzheimer came from the Medicine-Worldwide website which is in Germany. This website is one of my references.
Shown here is Jean Martin Charcot, a brilliant scientist born in Paris in the 19th century. Perhaps fortunately photography was developed in France, and thus we have a photo of Charcot. Again this is from the Medicine-Worldwide website, which is in the German language.

 

This cover is from Alibris. Pauling was critical of over-the-counter cold medicines because of their side effects. Pauling felt that nutrition could even help mental retardation.
This image of Galvani is presented courtesy of the National Library of Medicine. The reference here is the National Library of Medicine website, which I have used extensively in building my own website. Galvani made a brilliant contribution to medicine with his experiments on dead frogs. Galvani demonstrated that the application of electricity to dead frogs made them move, thus demonstrating the importance of electricity to neurophysiology. This caused a sensation in scientific circles.
Charles Darwin was born in 1809 in Shrewsbury, England. The picture is again from the Medicine-Worldwide website.
Harvey Cushing, a brilliant surgeon, was born in 1869 in Cleveland, Ohio. Cushing is one of the few Americans listed by Medicine-Worldwide as one of the greatest medical scientists.
Shown here is Sir John Eccles, who was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1903. Eccles later traveled the world, including a stint at Oxford. Eccles died in 1997 after making brilliant contributions to neurophysiology. The clipart is from Medicine-Worldwide.