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Ivan
Petrovich Pavlov was born on September 14, 1849 at Ryazan, where his father,
Peter Dmitrievich Pavlov, was a village priest. He was educated first
at the church school in Ryazan and then at the theological seminary there.
Inspired by
the progressive ideas which D. I. Pisarev, the most eminent of the Russian
literary critics of the 1860's and I. M. Sechenov, the father of Russian
physiology, were spreading, Pavlov abandoned his religious career and
decided to devote his life to science. In 1870 he enrolled in the physics
and mathematics faculty to take the course in natural science.
Pavlov became passionately absorbed with physiology, which in fact was
to remain of such fundamental importance to him throughout his life. It
was during this first course that he produced, in collaboration with another
student, Afanasyev, his first learned treatise, a work on the physiology
of the pancreatic nerves. This work was widely acclaimed and he was awarded
a gold medal for it.
In 1875 Pavlov
completed his course with an outstanding record and received the degree
of Candidate of Natural Sciences. However, impelled by his overwhelming
interest in physiology, he decided to continue his studies and proceeded
to the Academy of Medical Surgery to take the third course there. He completed
this in 1879 and was again awarded a gold medal. After a competitive examination,
Pavlov won a fellowship at the Academy, and this together with his position
as Director of the Physiological Laboratory at the clinic of the famous
Russian clinician, S. P. Botkin, enabled him to continue his research
work. In 1883 he presented his doctor's thesis on the subject of «The
centrifugal nerves of the heart». In this work he developed his idea of
nervism, using as example the intensifying nerve of the heart which he
had discovered, and furthermore laid down the basic principles on the
trophic function of the nervous system. In this as well as in other works,
resulting mainly from his research in the laboratory at the Botkin clinic,
Pavlov showed that there existed a basic pattern in the reflex regulation
of the activity of the circulatory organs.
In 1890 Pavlov
was invited to organize and direct the Department of Physiology at the
Institute of Experimental Medicine. Under his direction, which continued
over a period of 45 years to the end of his life, this Institute became
one of the most important centres of physiological research.
In 1890 Pavlov
was appointed Professor of Pharmacology at the Military Medical Academy
and five years later he was appointed to the then vacant Chair of Physiology,
which he held till 1925.
It was at the
Institute of Experimental Medicine in the years 1891-1900 that Pavlov
did the bulk of his research on the physiology of digestion. It was here
that he developed the surgical method of the «chronic» experiment with
extensive use of fistulas, which enabled the functions of various organs
to be observed continuously under relatively normal conditions. This discovery
opened a new era in the development of physiology, for until then the
principal method used had been that of «acute» vivisection, and the function
of an organism had only been arrived at by a process of analysis. This
meant that research into the functioning of any organ necessitated disruption
of the normal interrelation between the organ and its environment. Such
a method was inadequate as a means of determining how the functions of
an organ were regulated or of discovering the laws governing the organism
as a whole under normal conditions - problems which had hampered the development
of all medical science. With his method of research, Pavlov opened the
way for new advances in theoretical and practical medicine. With extreme
clarity he showed that the nervous system played the dominant part in
regulating the digestive process, and this discovery is in fact the basis
of modern physiology of digestion. Pavlov made known the results of his
research in this field, which is of great importance in practical medicine,
in lectures which he delivered in 1895 and published under the title Lektsii
o rabote glavnykh pishchevaritelnyteh zhelez (Lectures on the function
of the principal digestive glands) (1897).
Pavlov's research into the physiology of digestion led him logically to
create a science of conditioned reflexes. In his study of the reflex regulation
of the activity of the digestive glands, Pavlov paid special attention
to the phenomenon of «psychic secretion», which is caused by food stimuli
at a distance from the animal. By employing the method - developed by
his colleague D. D. Glinskii in 1895 - of establishing fistulas in the
ducts of the salivary glands, Pavlov was able to carry out experiments
on the nature of these glands. A series of these experiments caused Pavlov
to reject the subjective interpretation of «psychic» salivary secretion
and, on the basis of Sechenov's hypothesis that psychic activity was of
a reflex nature, to conclude that even here a reflex - though not a permanent
but a temporary or conditioned one - was involved.
This discovery
of the function of conditioned reflexes made it possible to study all
psychic activity objectively, instead of resorting to subjective methods
as had hitherto been necessary; it was now possible to investigate by
experimental means the most complex interrelations between an organism
and its external environment.
In 1903, at the 14th International Medical Congress in Madrid, Pavlov
read a paper on «The Experimental Psychology and Psychopathology of Animals».
In this paper the definition of conditioned and other reflexes was given
and it was shown that a conditioned reflex should be regarded as an elementary
psychological phenomenon, which at the same time is a physiological one.
It followed from this that the conditioned reflex was a clue to the mechanism
of the most highly developed forms of reaction in animals and humans to
their environment and it made an objective study of their psychic activity
possible.
Subsequently,
in a systematic programme of research, Pavlov transformed Sechenov's theoretical
attempt to discover the reflex mechanisms of psychic activity into an
experimentally proven theory of conditioned reflexes.
As guiding
principles of materialistic teaching on the laws governing the activity
of living organisms, Pavlov deduced three principles for the theory of
reflexes: the principle of determinism, the principle of analysis and
synthesis, and the principle of structure.
The development of these principles by Pavlov and his school helped greatly
towards the building-up of a scientific theory of medicine and towards
the discovery of laws governing the functioning of the organism as a whole.
Experiments
carried out by Pavlov and his pupils showed that conditioned reflexes
originate in the cerebral cortex, which acts as the «prime distributor
and organizer of all activity of the organism» and which is responsible
for the very delicate equilibrium of an animal with its environment. In
1905 it was established that any external agent could, by coinciding in
time with an ordinary reflex, become the conditioned signal for the formation
of a new conditioned reflex. In connection with the discovery of this
general postulate Pavlov proceeded to investigate «artificial conditioned
reflexes». Research in Pavlov's laboratories over a number of years revealed
for the first time the basic laws governing the functioning of the cortex
of the great hemispheres. Many physiologists were drawn to the problem
of developing Pavlov's basic laws governing the activity of the cerebrum.
As a result of all this research there emerged an integrated Pavlovian
theory on higher nervous activity.
Even in the early stages of his research Pavlov received world acclaim
and recognition. In 1901 he was elected a corresponding member of the
Russian Academy of Sciences, in 1904 he was awarded a Nobel Prize, and
in 1907 he was elected Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences;
in 1912 he was given an honorary doctorate at Cambridge University and
in the following years honorary membership of various scientific societies
abroad. Finally, upon the recommendation of the Medical Academy of Paris,
he was awarded the Order of the Legion of Honour (1915).
After the October
Revolution, a special government decree, signed by Lenin on January 24,
1921, noted «the outstanding scientific services of Academician I.P.Pavlov,
which are of enormous significance to the working class of the whole world».
The Communist
Party and the Soviet Government saw to it that Pavlov and his collaborators
were given unlimited scope for scientific research. The Soviet Union became
a prominent centre for the study of physiology, and the fact that the
15th International Physiological Congress of August 9-17, 1935, was held
in Leningrad and Moscow clearly shows that it was acknowledged as such.
Pavlov directed all his indefatigable energy towards scientific reforms.
He devoted much effort to transforming the physiological institutions
headed by him into world centres of scientific knowledge, and it is generally
acknowledged that he succeeded in this endeavour.
Pavlov nurtured
a great school of physiologists, which produced many distinguished pupils.
He left the richest scientific legacy - a brilliant group of pupils, who
would continue developing the ideas of their master, and a host of followers
all over the world.
In 1881, Pavlov
married Seraphima (Sara) Vasilievna Karchevskaya, a teacher, the daughter
of a doctor in the Black Sea fleet. She first had a miscarriage, said
to be due to her having to run after her very fast-walking husband. Subsequently
they had a son, Wirchik, who died very suddenly as a child; three sons,
Vladimir, Victor and Vsevolod, one of whom was a well-known physicist
and professor of physics at Leningrad in 1925, and a daughter, Vera.
Dr. Pavlov
died in Leningrad on February 27, 1936.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921.
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