Abstract
While the physiology, histology and stem cell biology of smell are active fields of contemporary research, smell is probably the sense that physicians knew the least about prior to the 20th century. Joseph-Hippolyte Cloquet (1787–1840) was an anatomist who, in 1815, defended a singular doctoral thesis—On odours, the sense of olfaction and the olfactory organs—then went on to publish, in 1821, the first complete treatise on rhinology. In our biographical sketch, we focus on Cloquet’s significant contributions to olfactory anatomy and physiology. His realization that odours are chemical and molecular in nature led him to formulate an accurate functional theory of the olfactory mucosa. Following a historical introduction, we review contemporary literature on the anatomical–functional understanding of olfaction and propose a (possibly debatable) theory for the lexical deficits one encounters when trying to describe the sense of smell.
Highlights
While the physiology, histology and stem cell biology of smell are active fields of contemporary research, smell is probably the sense that physicians knew the least about prior to the 20th century
Cloquet was influenced by John Locke (1632– 1704) on ‘understanding’, and by Etienne Bonnot de Condillac (1714–1780) and his proposal to replace metaphysics with scientific observation and rigorous factual study
Cloquet was the first physician to undertake an in-depth study of olfaction, making him a pioneer of scientific
Summary
Histology and stem cell biology of smell are active fields of contemporary research, smell is probably the sense that physicians knew the least about prior to the 20th century.
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