Carl Ludwig Schleich

Carl Ludwig Schleich
Born (1859-07-19)19 July 1859
Stettin, Pomerania.
Died 7 March 1922(1922-03-07) (aged 62)
Bad Saarow
Occupation physician, philosopher, writer, musician, painter
Known for introducing local anaesthesia into clinical practice[1][2]

Carl Ludwig Schleich (19 July 1859 – 7 March 1922) was a German surgeon and writer. He is best known for his contribution to clinical anesthesia. In addition, he was also as a philosopher, poet and painter.[3]

Biography

Family

Schelich's ancestors were a Munich family of prominent painters who had moved to Freienwalde. They included Robert Schleich and Eduard Schleich the Elder.[4]

Early life

From a very early age, Schleich was exposed to a background in biology. His father was very interested in natural history and the leading theories in the epoch. Later Schleich would recall:

In the year 1864, Graefe was a guest in my father's house during the historic conference of biologists, at which Darwin, Haeckel, and Virchow were the mutually hostile protagonists. I, alas, who was only five years of age, was not even aware of this earth-shaking event, since I was lying unconscious in the grip of meningitis.[5]

In his childhood, he frequently heard "extremely vigorous" debates about the existence of God, since his father was an unbeliever and his uncle, Hermann Frederick, a pastor.[6] These conversations caused a deep impression of Schleich, awho later wrote:

It is strange to note how deeply many of the arguments for and against the existence of God and immortality impressed themselves on my young mind... Such arguments would occupy me for days, and I recalled them during our divinity lessons, and even to this day they have their repercussions in my philosophical reflections.[7]

Following this period, Schleich was confirmed and wanted to become a pastor.[8]

Career

Later, however, Schleich decided to study medicine in Zurich, Greifswald and Berlin, where he was an assistant to the prominent anthropologist Rudolf Virchow. In 1887, Schleich received his doctorate at the University of Greifswald, and stayed there as an assistant two years more; a period of time where Virchow spoke to him about his antidarwinist views.[9]

Afterwards, he opened a private practice in Berlin, and in 1899 attained a professorship at the University of Berlin. In the early 1890s, Schleich introduced a methodology of infiltration anesthesia by using a highly diluted cocaine solution.

In 1900, he became director of the Department of Surgery at Gross-Lichterfelde.He would become a pioneer of glial research, and recognized that glial cells played a dynamic role in nervous system function. Schleich believed that an interconnected and interactive neuronal-glial network was a substrate for brain functions.

Among his written works was an influential treatise on hysteria research called Gedankenmacht und Hysterie. Schleich was also an accomplished poet and novelist. One of his better known fictional works was the popular Phantasien über den Sinn des Lebens, which translates to "Fantasy about the Meaning of Life". His memoirs Besonnte Vergangenheit (1922) became one of the most successful autobiographies in the German language, running well above 1 million copies. The book laid the commercial foundations of the German editor Ernst Rowohlt, and was translated into English with the itle "Those Were Good Days".[10]

Views on science and religion

In his essays Von der Seele, Schleich wrote about what he perceived as "epistemological monopolies", or leading scientific opinions that he described as "just as dogmatic as the Church." He, for instance, said that "the Darwinian theory has preached enough about the survival instinct as an almost dogmatic cause for the evolution of living beings;"[11] and he concluded:

It is no longer an indisputable fact that natural science can be just as dogmatic as the Church. The stubborn adherence to prejudices, traditions and comfortable habits is but a general human obstacle to progress, no matter whether it is expressed at Church, the State, or the laboratory. We have these pretentions of infallibility here and there, and the popes of science have been no less intolerant than those of the Church, and still are.[12]

He maintained that "Darwinism by no means overturns the concept of creation",[13] and, in his Memoirs (1920), he expressed a strong belief in the existence of God[14] and the relation of this to science, stating that this was one of the main objects of his physiological studies:

It has always been my endeavour to compare the intellectual processes with the action of an electrical apparatus of marvellous precision. But I have never denied that this is only one, and perhaps the most interesting mode of considering the most sacred miracle of the soul; and not an unveiling, by a theory of cognition, of its metaphysical home and its God-given function...
What I most passionately desire is to turn men away from the barren desert of materialism, and compel them to recognize the governance of quite other powers than capital, politics, the struggle for existence, and the laws of inheritance. In my own way I have become a believer, through my work at the microscope and the contemplation of Nature, and I am eager to do what I can to contribute to the union of science and religion. He who knows much of Nature, and knows it thoroughly, must come to believe in a metaphysical Ruler. The miracles are too many, and one of the noblest tasks of science is to show that the most everyday things, the most apparently familiar, the simplest processes, contain a chain of amazing revelations and mysteries.[15]

For holding these views, Scheliech was criticized during his lifetime as "an enemy of science;" but he refused to deny his conviction that there were mystic "mysteries" beyond the realm of science:

A critic once called me an enemy of science. Well I have become an enemy of the science that with narrow-minded dogmatism merely makes war upon all that lies beyond the hedge of its methodical self-circumscribed garden, which yields only those vegetables that feed the gardener, but refuses to know anything of all the possibilities of the free and lovely virgin forest wherein one may indeed lose one's way.[16]

Works

References

  1. Alexei Verkhratsky, Arthur Morgan Butt (2013). Glial Physiology and Pathophysiology. John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 9781118402054
  2. Roland Münch, Karel B. Absolon (1976). Carl Ludwig Schleich and the Development of Local Anesthesia.
  3. Buch- und Zeitschriften-Verlag "Die Quintessenz," (1973). Quintessence International, Dental Digest, Volume 4. p. 87
  4. Schleich, (1936), p. 15
  5. Schleich (1936), p. 63
  6. Schleich, 2013, p. 89-90
  7. Schleich (1936), p. 77
  8. Schleich, Carl Ludwig. Besonnte Vergangenheit. Lebenserinnerungen, Berlin 1921, S. 79–95.; and Schleich (1936), p. 77: When I was confirmed I quite made up my mind, under the influence of Pastor Pfundtheller, the brother of the Dr. Pfundtheller of whom I have been speaking, that I myself would become a pastor.
  9. Schleich, (1936), p. 159
  10. Sir James Hopwood Jeans (1928). The physics of the universe, Volume 138. Henry Herbert Wills memorial lecture. R. & R. Clark. p. 664
  11. Shcleich, Von der Seele. Essays (1922); Chapter 4; "Unterbewußtsein": Die Darwinsche Lehre hat genug gepredigt vom Erhaltungstrieb, als beinahe dogmatischem Motiv der Fortentwicklung der Lebewesen.
  12. Shcleich, Von der Seele. Essays (1922). In the Chapter "Glaube Und Wissenschaft", he wrote: "Es ist eine nicht mehr zu bestreitende Tatsache, daß die Naturwissenschaft ebenso dogmatisch sein kann wie die Kirche. Das eigensinnige Festhalten an Voreingenommenheiten, Überlieferungen und bequemen Gewohnheiten ist eben ein allgemein menschliches Hindernis für den Fortschritt, ganz gleich, ob es sich in Kirche, Staat oder Laboratorium bekundet. Wir haben Unfehlbarkeitsanwandlungen hier wie dort, und die Päpste der Wissenschaft sind nicht weniger intolerant gewesen als die der Kirche und sind es noch."
  13. Karl Ludwig Schleich (1951). Die Under der Seele. S. Fischer. p. 116: Darwinismus noch keineswegs mit demselben den Schöpfungsbegriff umstößt
  14. Schleich (1936), p. 159; Schelich tells how in occasion he impulsively told Virchow: "I don't know of any really eminent and significant man who didn't believe in something like God or the spirit of Nature!"
  15. Schleich (1936), p. 232
  16. Schleich (1936), p. 232

Bibliography

External links

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