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  1. Arthur Carl Wilhelm Heffter (15 June 1859, in Leipzig – 8 February 1925, in Berlin) was a German pharmacologist and chemist. He was the first chairman of the German Society of Pharmacologists, and was largely responsible for the first Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology .

  2. In 1896 Heffter became a full professor at Leipzig. Our decision to name a research institute in honor of Arthur Heffter was based largely on seminal work he began at about this time on alkaloids derived from the peyote cactus (Lophophora williamsii, which was then called Anhalonium williamsii). Earlier, in 1888, the famous Berlin toxicologist ...

  3. Dr. Arthur Heffter . The Institute is named in honor of Dr. Arthur Heffter, a turn-of-the-century German research pharmacologist, who was the first scientist to study, systematically, a naturally-occurring hallucinogen, publishing his work in 1897.

  4. Arthur Heffter. Arthur Heffter was a German chemist/pharmacologist/physician who first isolated pure Mescaline from the peyote cactus in the late 1890s. He also proved that mescaline was the alkaloid in the cactus that is responsible for its psychoactive properties. This was the first psychedelic compound to be isolated and identified from its ...

  5. Karl Wilhelm Arthur Heffter identified mescaline as the active principle in the peyote cactus. He was a leader during the classical period of Pharmacology, was the first chairman of the German Society of Pharmacologists, and was largely responsible for the first Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology. Born in Leipzig Germany, on June 15, 1859 ...

  6. May 10, 2019 · Whether visionary or therapeutic, since its discovery by Arthur Heffter mescaline will always already have been there. Footnote 18. Based on his first-hand experience, Heffter predicted that “thankful opportunities” would lie ahead for physiologists and experimental psychologists . The question of whether the cactus as a whole might prove ...

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  8. Founded in 1919 by Arthur Heffter (1859-1925) as the "Handbuch der Experimentellen Pharmakologie" and renamed to its current title in 1937, the Handbook has continued to capture the emergence and developments of experimental pharmacology since the initial systematic work of Rudolf Buchheim and his student Oswald Schmiedeberg.

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