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  1. Abstract. Robert Remak ’s contributions to twentieth century mathematics range over a broad area. His name is best-known among group theorists in connection with questions concerning decomposition and his exploitation of the direct product concept. Specialists in the geometry of numbers are acquainted with some of the work that led Issai ...

  2. Jan 1, 2017 · After having received private tuition, Remak went to school in Posen until 1833. In the same year, he started studying medicine in Berlin with, among others, the famous Johannes Müller (1801–1858). He also became inspired by the autopsies carried out by the prosector, Robert Froriep (1804–1861). Already during this time, he published ...

  3. Robert Remak. Robert Remak (26 July 1815 – 29 August 1865) was a German embryologist, physiologist, and neurologist, born in Posen, Prussia. Remak obtained his medical degree from Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin in 1838 specializing in neurology. [1] He worked on embryology, and also discovered unmyelinated nerve fibres and the nerve ...

  4. Jan 25, 2017 · Ray Dyer, PhD. Robert Remak (1815-1865), a German-Jewish neurologist whose expertise extended to embryology, physiology, and microscopy. Born in Posen (Prussia), in what is now west-central Poland, Remak studied at the University of Berlin where he became assistant to Johannes Mueller. Remak made pioneering contributions to histological ...

  5. This laid the foundation for the idea that cells are the fundamental components of plants and animals. In the 1850s, two Polish scientists living in Germany pushed this idea further, culminating in what we recognize today as the modern cell theory. In 1852, Robert Remak (1815–1865), a prominent neurologist and embryologist, published ...

  6. Mar 1, 2018 · Robert Remak (1815–1865) (Fig. 3) like Schwann and Virchow, trained in Müller's laboratory at the University in Berlin.In 1852, Remak summarized his early work on cell generation: “Since the publication of the cell-theory, it has seemed to me that the extracellular creation of animal cells is as unlikely as the generation “aequivoca” (spontaneous generation).

  7. Rudolf Ludwig Carl Virchow ( / ˈvɪərkoʊ, ˈfɪərxoʊ /; [1] German: [ˈvɪʁço], [2] also [ˈfɪʁço]; [3] 13 October 1821 – 5 September 1902) was a German physician, anthropologist, pathologist, prehistorian, biologist, writer, editor, and politician. He is known as "the father of modern pathology " and as the founder of social ...

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