Статуэтка Павлов Иван Петрович
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Material
Литьевой мрамор
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Цвет товара
Бронза
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Высота
20 см.
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Вес
0.8 кг.
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Павлов Иван Петрович
Изысканное изделие из литьевого камня выполнено в цвете антик. Статуэтка подойдёт для подарка медицинским работникам, всем занятым в области психоневрологии, личностям, вдохновляющимся всемирно признанными учёными.
Pavlov Ivan Petrovich (1849-1936), physiologist, author of the doctrine of conditioned reflexes. Born September 26, 1849 in Ryazan in the family of a parish priest. In 1860-1869. Pavlov studied at the Ryazan Theological School, then at the seminary. In 1870 he entered the St. Petersburg University, the natural department of the physics and mathematics department. In 1875, Pavlov was awarded a gold medal for his work "On the nerves that I work in the pancreas". Having received the degree of candidate of natural sciences, he entered the third year of the Medical and Surgical Academy and graduated with honors. In 1883 he defended his thesis "Centrifugal nerves of the heart". Becoming a professor in 1888, Pavlov got his own laboratory. This allowed him to engage in research on the nervous regulation of the secretion of gastric juice without interference. In 1891 Pavlov became the head of the physiological department at the new Institute of Experimental Medicine. In 1895 he made a report on the activity of the dog's salivary glands. The works were soon translated into German, French and English and published in Europe. Work brought Pavlov great fame. In 1904, Ivan Petrovich received the Nobel Prize for his work on digestion and blood circulation. In 1907 Pavlov became an academician. The revolutionary upheavals of 1917 Pavlov went through very hard. In 1920, the physiologist sent a letter to the Council of People's Commissars "On the free abandonment of Russia due to the impossibility of conducting scientific work and rejection of the social experiment carried out in the country." The Council of People's Commissars adopted a resolution signed by V.I. Lenin - "in the shortest possible time to create the most favorable conditions for the scientific work of Academician Pavlov and his staff." In 1923 Pavlov undertook a long trip abroad. He visited scientific centers in England, France and the USA. In 1925, the Physiological Laboratory founded by him in the village of Koltushi at the Institute of Experimental Medicine of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR was transformed into the Institute of Physiology. Pavlov remained its director until the end of his life. In the winter of 1936, returning from Koltushi, the scientist fell ill with bronchial inflammation. He died on February 27 in Leningrad.