Albrecht von Haller
Albrecht von Haller is a Swiss physiologist. Born in Bern. I enrolled at the University of Tübingen at the age of 15, but after a year and a half I left to go to the University of Leiden. Here he learned medicine under Albinus and Burhaber. Later I studied in London, Paris, and in Basel, I learned higher mathematics from Bernoulli. In 1729 he returned to his hometown, Berne, where he spent five years. In 1732, he wrote poetry titled "The poetry of the city of Switzerland" and gained attention all over Europe. He was recommended as a professor of anatomy, surgery, and botany at the University of Göttingen, founded in 1736, where his academic life began. At the University 's laboratory, founded under the novelty of the novel, following the example of Ray Dunn, he did energetic research. The most famous of his achievements is the irritation hypothesis. He assumed the stimulus and sensitivity as the fundamental phenomenon of the animal. Irritability is a characteristic of muscles, and muscles contract by mechanical and electrical stimuli.