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  1. May 9, 2018 · Bernard, Claude Claude Bernard (1813–78) was a key figure in French nineteenth-century science, and one of the world's great physiologists. With good reason he has been called the ‘father of experimental medicine’.

  2. May 20, 2022 · Claude Bernard revolutionized medicine and medical research by conceptualizing a method he called “experimental medicine”, which still forms the basis of countless medical advances today. His reasoning is based on four pillars that logically follow one another:

  3. Claude Bernard, (born July 12, 1813, Saint-Julien, France—died Feb. 10, 1878, Paris), French physiologist. He taught at several major French institutions and was named a senator in 1869. He discovered the role of the pancreas in digestion, the glycogenic function of the liver in carbohydrate metabolism, and blood-supply regulation by the ...

  4. Sep 1, 2001 · Bernard's physiology: theoretical bases. Bernard's physiology rests on three conceptual pillars: determinism, the rejection of teleology and metaphysics, and overcoming the dependence on...

  5. Quick Reference. (1813–1878) French physiologist who formulated the principle of homeostasis, the physiological self-corrective mechanism that “automatically” seeks to restore the normal internal bodily environment when it is disrupted. Bernard's concepts remain relevant in studies of the physiological basis of many environmental health problems.

  6. Claude Bernard (1813-1878) was a physiologist of modern France, founder of experimental medicine. He is the father of modern experimental physiology. Bernard studied in Paris and earned a medical degree in 1841.

  7. May 20, 2022 · By showing that the liver secretes glucose into the blood, Claude Bernard showed that organs can also produce and secrete molecules into the blood, and he conceptualized the notion of internal secretion. Before Claude Bernard, it was thought that each organ had only one function.

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