Gustav Ricker
Gustav Wilhelm August Josef Ricker (November 2, 1870 – September 23, 1948) was a German physician and pathologist born in Hadamar, Hesse-Nassau.
He studied philosophy and medicine at several universities, earning his doctorate in 1893 at the University of Berlin. In 1897 he received his habilitation under Albert Thierfelder (1842-1908) at the University of Rostock, and from 1906 until 1933 was head of pathology at the city hospitals (Altstadt and Sudenburg) in Magdeburg. Afterwards he worked as a private scholar in Berlin and Dresden.
Ricker is remembered for his concept of Stufengesetz, a law of stages in which different neural stimulations cause different changes of flow in the capillaries,[1] and also Relationspathologie (relational pathology), in which he maintains that the root of pathological processes are a neural process and not a cellular process.
Today in Magdeburg, Gustav-Ricker-Straße and Gustav-Ricker-Krankenhaus are named in his honor.
Selected publications
- Entwurf einer Relationspathologie, 1905
- Grundlinien einer Logik der Physiologie als reiner Naturwissenschaft, 1912
- Pathologie als Naturwissenschaft – Relationspathologie – Für Pathologen, Physiologen, Mediziner und Biologen, 1924
- Wissenschaftstheoretische Aufsätze für Ärzte, 1936
References
- Parts of this article are based on a translation of the equivalent article from the German Wikipedia.
- Uni-Magdeburg by Horst Peter Wolff, translated biography
- ↑ Integrative biophysics by Fritz Albert Popp, L. V. Belousov