Everything about Friedrich Tiedemann totally explained
Friedrich Tiedemann (
August 23,
1781 -
January 22,
1861) was a
German anatomist and
physiologist.
He was born at
Cassel, the eldest son of
Dietrich Tiedemann (1748-1803), a philosopher and psychologist of considerable repute. He graduated in
medicine at
Marburg in 1804, but soon abandoned practice. He devoted himself to the study of natural science, and, moving to
Paris, became an ardent follower of
Georges Cuvier. On his return to Germany he maintained the claims of patient and sober anatomical research against the prevalent speculations of the school of
Lorenz Oken, whose foremost antagonist he was long reckoned. His remarkable studies of the development of the human
brain, as correlated with his father's studies on the development of
intelligence, deserve mention. He spent most of his life as professor of anatomy and physiology at
Heidelberg, a position to which he was appointed in 1816, after having filled the chair of anatomy and
zoology for ten years at
Landshut, and died at
Munich.
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