Phineas Gage
Prior to the nineteenth century, the role of the brain in cognitive function was sorely misunderstood. As Shreeve (n.d) points out, the ancient Egyptians believed the seat of consciousness to be the organ of the heart and views of gray matter changed little in the ensuing millennia. It was not until the nineteenth century that evidence surfaced related to the preeminence of the brain in human cognitive affairs.
The first movement acknowledging the importance of the brain was ironically un-scientific. Phrenology did posit that the brain was a powerful organ capable of controlling human thought, emotion, and behavior. However, the rigid mapping of the brain that defines phrenology proved utterly ridiculous over time. It would take a series of remarkable patients for emerging brain scientists to uncover the mysteries of cognition -- and the interface between brain, mind, and body.
While Phineas Gage is one of the most famous neuroscience patients, he was not the only nineteenth century boon to the study of the brain. In fact, several brain regions have been named after the nineteenth-century scientists who discovered them and their role in cognition. Broca's area of the brain is practically a household word. The region that is connected with speech production, Broca's area of the brain is named after the French anatomist who offered compelling evidence for the localization of this specific cognitive function. In fact, Paul Broca was one of the first scientists to offer definitive evidence that -- while there is no single seat of thought -- specific cognitive...
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