NOTES.
[1] See the treatise of Anders Retzius on: ›The Origin and Development of Anatomy in the Scandinavian North›, which he delivered as an address on the occasion of his leaving the presidency of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on April 9th, 1845. See also Gustaf Retzius: Preface to ›Emanuel Swedenborg’s Scientific Works›, edit. by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Vol. I., 1907, p. V., et seqq., and Alfred H. Stroh, M. A.: ›Some testimonies concerning Swedenborg, the Scientist›, Stockholm 1909, p. 10.
[2] In an address before the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences at Stockholm in connection with a reference to Swedenborg’s work: ›De Cerebro›, which had just appeared in the English translation by Dr. Rudolf Tafel; See Gustaf Retzius: Op. cit. p. VI. and Alfred H. Stroh: Op. cit. p. 11.
[3] See an address of Max Neuburger concerning ›Swedenborg’s Beziehungen zur Gehirnphysiologie›, delivered before the ›Versammlung deutscher Naturforscher und Ärzte›, Hamburg, 1901.
[4] See the article by C. G. Santesson concerning Swedenborg in ›Nordisk Tidskrift›, 1904, No. 5.
[5] See an address of Gustaf Retzius as president of the ›Versammlung der Anatomischen Gesellschaft›, Heidelberg, 1903; and also his preface to the edition of Emanuel Swedenborg’s Scientific Works, which the Royal Academy of Sciences began to publish in 1907; and the references by the same author to Swedenborg’s statements concerning the anatomy and physiology of the brain in the Croonian lecture delivered by him in London, in the year 1908.
[6] See the address of J. J. Berzelius at the meeting of Scandinavian Natural Scientists in 1842 concerning: ›The rise of the Scandinavian shore above the level of the surrounding ocean› etc., quoted from Alfred H. Stroh: Op. cit. p. 6.
[7] See the address of A. E. Nordenskiöld before the Royal Academy of Sciences on March 26th, 1888, quoted from A. H. Stroh: Op. cit. p. 6.
[8] See A. G. Nathorst’s introduction to the edition of Swedenborg’s Scientific Works of the Royal Academy of Sciences, Vol. I., 1907.