- Louis Robinson
Louis Robinson was a
19th Century Englishphysician ,paediatrician andauthor . An ardentevolutionist , he helped pioneer modern child medicine during the laterVictorian era , writing prolifically in journals on the emerging science ofpaediatrics [See "The Nineteenth Century", "Journal of Anatomy" and "British Medical Journal" amongst others] . Active in scientific debate, Robinson was critiqued in some parts of the press given his outspoken views in the wider debate between religious and scientific theories ofhuman origin .Born in
1857 to aQuaker family inSaddlescombe nearBrighton , Robinson was educated at Quaker schools in Ackworth andYork . He went on to study medicine inLondon (atSt Bartholomew's Hospital ) andNewcastle upon Tyne , before graduating top of his class in1889 . Drawing on his extensive research, Robinson's interest in evolution was expressed in a series of articles [Examples include: "Darwinism in the Nursery" (1891), "The Meaning of a Baby's Footprint" (1892), "Darwinism and Swimming: a theory" (1893), "Evolution and the Amateur Naturalist" (1897), "Eye Language: the natural history of Ocular Expression" (1898)] , which led to an appearance before theBritish Association atEdinburgh to present his paper "The Prehensile Power of Infants" [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E05E6DF1538E233A25751C2A9639C94639ED7CF "A Baby's Footprint"] ,The New York Times , May 22, 1892] . A keen practitioner as well as theorist, Robinson was one of the first doctors of his era to conduct experiments with young babies, testing over sixty subjects immediately after birth on their power of grip [An account of this is provided in "Science in the Nineteenth-Century Periodical" (2004), by Cantor, Dawson and Gooday: http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=q50m1PCOcZ8C&printsec=frontcover&dq=subject:%22Journalism,+Scientific%3B+Great+Britain%3B+History%3B+19th+century.%22&sig=ACfU3U02PBPq9_zpp4tMKvsOg3DxsYuFZQ] . This echoed the approach of the pioneering German physicianAdolph Kussmaul .Following a series of
lectures at Oxford onvestigial reflexes , he was sought after to teach in both British and American universities, and increasingly noticed by prominent scientists like Huxley, Burdon-Sanderson and Flower. However, Robinson opted to focus on his work as a doctor inStreatham . Nonetheless, he continued his research, employing several assistants, and leading to his publication of a volume on evolution that focused onanimal behaviour [Robinson, L (1897) "Wild Traits in Tame Animals": William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh] . He was married with four children.ee also
*
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health
*Charles Darwin
*Thomas Henry Huxley
*Adolph Kussmaul References
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