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Nerve Endings, The Discovery Of The Synapse: The Quest to Find How Brain Cells Communicate by Richard Rapport

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"A true tale of scientific discovery, Nerve Endings chronicles not only the little-known story of one of the nineteenth century's greatest intellectual struggles but also describes the frailty, perseverance, and creativity of human beings." Two doctors, the warm Spaniard Cajal and the cool Italian Golgi, struggled first against scientific barriers and ultimately against each other to discover what brain cells looked like and how they managed to contact one another. Both did their most important research alone in tiny laboratories set up on their kitchen tables, and both made profound discoveries that led to their jointly winning the 1906 Nobel Prize. Yet one of them found his way into the microscopic forest of individual cells, while the other died convinced that the entire nervous system is a network physically connecting every brain cell directly to its neighbors.

Hardcover

First published May 2, 2005

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
42 reviews1 follower
April 1, 2021
This should be a movie. Great story of globalization, sciencie, ego, passion and family
Profile Image for John Hewlett.
41 reviews2 followers
September 6, 2025
This book highlights why I do not trust Goodreads ratings. I am an anatomy professor and can attest to the fact that this is a really great little history of the struggle for the validity of “the neuron doctrine.”
Profile Image for Robert Strupp.
62 reviews2 followers
November 5, 2012
Santiago Ramón y Cajal discovered the synapse, the then unnamed gap between neurons when "common knowledge" said that all the nerves in the human body were physically connected. The Spaniard Cajal, along with an imperious Italian scientist, Golgi, eventually received a Nobel Prize in 1906 (back when it was awarded on merit, not a worldwide PR campaign.)

The problem in the 1800s, was being able to see the individual details of the cells of the nervous system under the 19th Century light telescopes then available. Italian Golgi created a staining process "la reazion nera"--the black reaction--which enabled scientists around the world to finally see the workings of the human cell.

Cajal, genius, artist and scientist painstakingly modified Golgi's technique for staining cells and in his remote Spanish laboratory, for years, was clearly viewing intricacies no other biologist could. The procedure he came up with required several days of work to stain one set of slides and took many weeks of trial and error to perfect. Cajal displayed a dedication and tenacity that today, only one hundred years later is as rare as an accurate count of votes for President ... in Russia.

At one point, the Spaniard Cajal was asked to give a speech but was hesitant because his German was so poor. That's okay, the requester replied, you can give your speech in French. How many American scientists today could do that?

The book includes several photos and drawings. One of them shows the actual synapse as viewed through an electron microscope, and seeing that image, I have no conception of why Cajal would have even suspected there was a gap between neurons.

The book has endnotes but they are not superscripted in the text, and since virtually all are from Cajal's own autobiography, they add little to the discussion. There is also a handy 'Glossary' explaining many of the scientific terms used.

'Nerve Endings: The Discovery of the Synapse' is a good book to read if one is interested in the early beliefs and methods of and about the human brain. While it is far from a page-turner, I feel better educated having read it.

Profile Image for Ore.
27 reviews1 follower
August 26, 2024
I love a good history lesson & this was on of ‘em. Cajal’s diligence and commitment to exploration is admirable. Hope to reach such levels too.

I think a big lesson was learning to work for long periods without getting “noticed” from people you expect to fawn at the novelty of your work. He never let it stop him, just kept on exploring.

He was also lucky that he was away from the noise so his thinking was more independent.
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