[71] See Boerhaave: ›Instit. med.›, 1720, No. 570, 574. The edition used by Swedenborg was printed 1727.

[72] ›Nempe in sensorio communi distinctas loco provincias esse pro diversis sensibus, uti cuilibet sensui suum externum proprium organum datum est.› Boerhaave: ›Prael. acad.›, published by Haller 1743, Vol. IV., p. 435. See also Boerhaave: ›Inst. med.›, 1720, No. 568.

[73] These lobes are, as he says, ›marked out and encompassed by the carotid artery, a statement by which he probably means the same as Ridley, when the latter says of the whole anterior region that it is marked out, as it were, by two branches of the carotid artery, one at the front and one at the side, i. e., Arteria cerebri anterior and Arteria cerebri media.

[74] J. J. Wepfer: ›Observationes anatomicæ ex cadaveribus eorum, quos sustulit Apoplexia›. Amstelædami, 1681, pp. 5-11, Case II.

[75] See A. Pacchioni: ›Opera›, Ed. quarta, Romæ, 1741, p. 112.

[76] See J. B. Winslow: ›Exposition anatomique de la Structure du corps humain.› Paris, 1732, IV., p. 210. With Willis one also finds the same subdivision of the hemispheres of the brain into an anterior and a posterior ›province›, as that employed by Swedenborg.

[77] Vieussens: ›Neur. univ.›, pp. 115, 117, and Tab. X.

[78] Op. cit., pp. 115, 117, and Tab. XVI.

[79] Op. cit., pp. 115, 117 and Tab. XV.

[80] Œc. R. A. II., No. 153: ›Experientiae est et temporis, ut evestigetur, qui gyrus et qui serpens tumulus in cerebro hunc aut illum musculum ut correspondentem suum in corpore respiciat. ’Cuniculos cerebri serpere, per autopsiam deprehenditur’ ait Clar. Pacchionus, Bellinus et alii plures.›