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Three. Human and Animal Appetite in Natural History and Physiology
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Elizabeth A. Williams
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- Introduction 1
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Part One. Anxieties of Appetite: Created Needs in the Enlightenment, 1750–1800
- Introduction to Part One 19
- One. Why We Eat: The Ancient Legacy 23
- Two. “False or Defective” Appetite in the Medical Enlightenment 40
- Three. Human and Animal Appetite in Natural History and Physiology 54
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Part Two. The Elusiveness of Appetite: Laboratory and Clinic, 1800–1850
- Introduction to Part Two 73
- Four. Perils and Pleasures of Appetite at 1800: Xavier Bichat and Erasmus Darwin 77
- Five. The Physiology of Appetite to 1850 90
- Six. Extremes and Perplexities of Appetite in Clinical Medicine 111
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Part Three. Intelligent or “Blind and Unconscious”? Appetite, 1850–1900
- Introduction to Part Three 129
- Seven. The Drive to Eat in Nutritional Physiology 133
- Eight. The Psychology of Ingestion: Appetite in Physiological and Animal Psychology 152
- Nine. Peripheral or Central? Disordered Eating in Clinical Medicine 172
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Part Four. Appetite as a Scientific Object, 1900–1950
- Introduction to Part Four 189
- Ten. Psyche, Nerves, and Hormones in the Physiology of Ingestion 194
- Eleven. Appetite and the Nature-Nurture Divide: Eating Behavior in Psychology and Ethology 217
- Twelve. Somatic, Psychic, Psychosomatic: The Medicine of Troubled Appetite 241
- Epilogue. Appetite after 1950 273
- Acknowledgments 289
- Abbreviations 293
- Notes 295
- Bibliography 369
- Index 413
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part One. Anxieties of Appetite: Created Needs in the Enlightenment, 1750–1800
- Introduction to Part One 19
- One. Why We Eat: The Ancient Legacy 23
- Two. “False or Defective” Appetite in the Medical Enlightenment 40
- Three. Human and Animal Appetite in Natural History and Physiology 54
-
Part Two. The Elusiveness of Appetite: Laboratory and Clinic, 1800–1850
- Introduction to Part Two 73
- Four. Perils and Pleasures of Appetite at 1800: Xavier Bichat and Erasmus Darwin 77
- Five. The Physiology of Appetite to 1850 90
- Six. Extremes and Perplexities of Appetite in Clinical Medicine 111
-
Part Three. Intelligent or “Blind and Unconscious”? Appetite, 1850–1900
- Introduction to Part Three 129
- Seven. The Drive to Eat in Nutritional Physiology 133
- Eight. The Psychology of Ingestion: Appetite in Physiological and Animal Psychology 152
- Nine. Peripheral or Central? Disordered Eating in Clinical Medicine 172
-
Part Four. Appetite as a Scientific Object, 1900–1950
- Introduction to Part Four 189
- Ten. Psyche, Nerves, and Hormones in the Physiology of Ingestion 194
- Eleven. Appetite and the Nature-Nurture Divide: Eating Behavior in Psychology and Ethology 217
- Twelve. Somatic, Psychic, Psychosomatic: The Medicine of Troubled Appetite 241
- Epilogue. Appetite after 1950 273
- Acknowledgments 289
- Abbreviations 293
- Notes 295
- Bibliography 369
- Index 413