![]() Todes wears his exhaustive research lightly, never burdening the reader with unnecessary or undigested detail. * Stephen Lovell, The Times Literary Supplement * Ivan Pavlov: A Russian Life in Science Science is an exceptional scientific biography, but it is also a vivid portrait of its time and place. The result is history of science at its intricate best. Tode's sources range from the whimsical and self-revealing "journal" with which Pavlov wooed his future wife in 1879 to NKVD surveillance reports on his mood more than half a century later, from documents on the student Pavlov's very first research into nervous control of the organs to taped interviews with his co-workers several decades after his death. ![]() * Sue Howarth, The Biologist * magisterial biography * London Review of Books * David Todes has spent more then twenty years with his subject, and has evidently approached his task with the same dedication that Pavlov kept up through his many decades in the lab. * Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History * Well written, thoroughly researched and extremely readable, the cost represents good value for money and Ivan Pavlov: A Russian Life in Science deserves a place on all good library shelves. Final Days Epilogue Glossary BibliographyĪ shining example of an academic biography. At the Summit: The International Physiology Congress 49. On the Eve of the Great Break PART SEVEN: Icon of Soviet and World Science (1929-1936) 41. Work and Play in City and Countryside 40. Freud, the Flood, and the Physiology of Personality 37. Lecturing the Bolsheviks and Leaving the Academy 35. To Leave My Homeland PART SIX: Prosperous Dissident (1922-1929) 31. Mariia Kapitonovna Petrova PART FIVE: War and Revolution (1914-1921) 26. Women Coworkers and the Physiology of Emotion 25. The Nobel Prize PART FOUR: Nobelist in the Silver Age (1905-1914) 19. The Physiology Factory: Relations of Production 13. The Physiology Factory: Forces of Production 12. In From the Cold PART THREE: Man of Tsarist Science (1891-1904) 8. Petersburg University PART TWO: Wilderness Years (1875-1890) 4. ![]() Preface Introduction PART ONE: The Seminarian Chooses Science (1849-1874) 1. The documents range from the records of his student years at Ryazan Seminary to the transcripts of the Communist Party cells in his labs, and from his scientific manuscripts and notebooks to his political speeches they include revealing love letters to his future wife and correspondence with hundreds of lay people, scholars, artists, and Communist Party leaders and unpublished memoirs by many coworkers, his daughter, his wife, and his lover. Todes's story of this powerful personality and extraordinary man is based upon interviews with surviving coworkers and family members (along with never-before-analyzed taped interviews from the 1960s and 1970s), examination of hundreds of scientific works by Pavlov and his coworkers, and close analysis of materials from some twenty-five archives. Petersburg in late imperial Russia, suffered the cataclysmic destruction of his world during the Bolshevik seizure of power and civil war of 1917-1921, rebuilt his life in his 70s as a "prosperous dissident" during the Leninist 1920s, and flourished professionally as never before in 1929-1936 during the industrialization, revolution, and terror of Stalin. Pavlov was born to a family of priests in provincial Ryazan before the serfs were emancipated, made his home and professional success in the glittering capital of St. This book is also a traditional "life and times" biography that weaves Pavlov into some 100 years of Russian history-particularly that of its intelligentsia-from the emancipation of the serfs to Stalin's time. This iconic "objectivist" was actually a profoundly anthropomorphic thinker whose science was suffused with his own experiences, values, and subjective interpretations. ![]() Contrary to legend, Pavlov was not a behaviorist (a misimpression captured in the false iconic image of his "training a dog to salivate to the sound of a bell") rather, he sought to explain not simply external behaviors, but the emotional and intellectual life of animals and humans. Combining personal documents with a close reading of scientific texts, Todes fundamentally reinterprets Pavlov's famous research on conditional reflexes. Todes makes use of a wealth of archival material to portray Pavlov's personality, life, times, and scientific work. The book is Todes's magnum opus, which he has been working on for some twenty years. This is a definitive, deeply researched biography of Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936) and is the first scholarly biography to be published in any language.
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