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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1963
Sir John Eccles, Alan L. Hodgkin, Andrew F. Huxley
Sir John Carew Eccles
Born: 27 January 1903, Melbourne, Australia
Died: 2 May 1997, Contra, Switzerland
Affiliation at the time of the award: Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
Prize motivation: "for their discoveries concerning the ionic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition in the peripheral and central portions of the nerve cell membrane"

Biography
John Carew Eccles was born in
Melbourne, Australia, on January 27th, 1903. He owes much to his
early training by his father, William James Eccles, who was a
teacher as also was his mother, née Mary Carew. He graduated
from Melbourne University in Medicine with first class
honours in 1925, and as Victorian Rhodes Scholar for 1925 entered
Magdalen
College, Oxford, as an undergraduate in order to study under
Sir Charles Sherrington.
In 1927, with first class honours in Natural Sciences, the
Christopher Welch Scholarship and a Junior Research Fellowship at
Exeter
College, Oxford, he commenced research on reflexes with
Sherrington's colleagues. Later from 1928 to 1931 he was research
assistant to Sherrington, there being eight papers published
conjointly; and he also collaborated with Ragnar Granit on two research projects.
He was awarded an Oxford D. Phil. degree in 1929 for a thesis on
Excitation and Inhibition. Later Oxford appointments were to a
Staines Medical Fellowship at Exeter College in 1932, a tutorial
fellowship of Magdalen College, and a University Demonstratorship
in 1934.
During this Oxford period research was largely on synaptic
transmission both in the central nervous system and peripherally
in sympathetic ganglia, smooth and cardiac muscle. Using the
newly developed techniques of electrophysiology - amplifiers and
cathode ray oscilloscopes. It was the period of controversy
between the exponents of the rival chemical and electrical
theories of synaptic transmission with Eccles in particular
resisting many aspects of the chemical transmitter story that was
being developed so effectively by Dale and his colleagues. In retrospect
it can be appreciated that this controversy had the effect of
defining problems and stimulating much good experimental work,
but the decisive victory of the chemical theory had to await the
intracellular recording both from neuromuscular junctions by Fatt
and Katz and from nerve cells
that was made possible by the technique of the microelectrode
with cathode follower amplification. And now, as a final stage of
this drama, electrical transmission between nerve cells is being
demonstrated in many specialized synapses, not only in the
invertebrate, but also in the vertebrate nervous system. These
recent developments have served to increase still further the
assurance with which we can accept the chemical transmitter
hypothesis for an overwhelming majority of both central and
peripheral synapses.
In 1937 Eccles left England for Australia to become Director of a
small medical research unit in Sydney, where he was fortunate to
have the distinguished collaboration of Bernard Katz and Stephen
Kuffler. This period from 1937 to 1943 was devoted largely to an
electrophysiological analysis of the neuromuscular junctions of
cats and frogs, but in the later years his time was almost
entirely occupied by applied science related to the war effort.
Subsequently as Professor of Physiology at the University of
Otago, New Zealand, from 1944-1951 he returned to synaptic
transmission in the central nervous system; and in 1951 Brock,
Coombs and Eccles succeeded for the first time in inserting
microelectrodes into nerve cells of the central nervous system
and in recording the electrical responses produced by excitatory
and inhibitory synapses. This early work was described in the
Waynflete Lectures of Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1952, which in
1953 were published as The Neurophysiological Basis of Mind:
The Principles of Neurophysiology. The New Zealand interlude
was also notable because there Eccles met the philosopher, Karl
Popper, from whom he learnt the relationship of the scientist to
hypotheses; how to be daring in developing hypotheses of the
greatest generality, and at the same time how to test them with
the utmost rigour with the consequence either of falsification in
whole or in part, or at best corroboration; but never
confirmation. He feels that this relationship to hypotheses has
not only increased his conceptual power, but has also greatly
helped emotionally! He can now rejoice even in the falsification
of a cherished theory, because even this is a scientific
success.
From 1952 until 1966 Eccles was Professor of Physiology of the
Australian
National University. In the earlier years (1953-1955) in
collaboration with Coombs and Fatt, attention was concentrated on
the biophysical properties of synaptic transmission, which is the
research that has been cited in the Nobel Award. The conceptual
basis of these investigations derived particularly from the
hypotheses of the ionic mechanisms of membrane activity that had
been developed by Hodgkin, Huxley, Katz and Keynes in England. In 1955 this
stage of the investigation was described in the Herter Lectures
of Johns Hopkins
University, and was published in 1957 as The Physiology of
Nerve Cells. Subsequently the ionic sieve hypothesis of
inhibitory synaptic action developed from that early work has
been corroborated not only in Canberra by the many associates
listed in the references of the lecture, but also in several
other laboratories.
There have been in recent years remarkable advances in the
powerful microtechniques: electron-microscopy, microelectrode
recording and micropharmacology. Eccles surveyed all these new
developments in The Physiology of Synapses in 1964.
However, the nervous system is not simply to be understood as a
system of synaptic transmissions. The organization of the
pathways of communication is essential for even the simplest
explanations of its performance. From 1960-1966 these
organizational problems dominated the research programs of the
Canberra laboratory. Soon the problems were studied at the much
more challenging levels of the brain with investigations firstly
of the dorsal column nuclei and thalamus, then of the hippocampus
and finally of the cerebellum. The rationale of these studies is
to understand the mode of operation of the structural patterns
that form such a characteristic feature of the aggregations of
nerve cells in the cerebellum and the hippocampus, for
example.
From 1966 Eccles continued this research first at the Institute
of Biomedical Research at Chicago and after 1968 at the State University of
New York at Buffalo. Progress accounts appeared in two books,
The Cerebellum as a Neuronal Machine, published conjointly
with Professors M. Ito and J. Szentágothai as co-authors,
and The Inhibitory Pathways of the Central Nervous System
(1969) which are the Sherrington Lectures at the University of
Liverpool.
In addition to this purely scientific study of the brain, Eccles
has followed Sherrington in developing a philosophy of the human
person that is consonant with the whole of brain science. Various
aspects of this philosophy were developed in lectures and
broadcast talks, and recently the whole of Eccles' philosophical
thought has been brought together in a book entitled Facing
Reality published by Springer in the Heidelberg Science
Library (1970).
The research work of Eccles in neurophysiology has been
recognized by several honours and awards amongst which the
following may be mentioned: Knight Bachelor, 1958; Fellow of the
Royal
Society, London, 1941 (Ferrier Lecturer, 1959; Royal Medal,
1962); Fellow Royal Australasian College of Physicians (Rennie
Lecturer, 1963); Fellow Royal Society of New Zealand; Fellow Australian Academy
of Science (President 1957-1961, Flinders Lecturer, 1963);
Honorary Foreign Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1959; Fellow,
Pontifical Academy of Sciences, 1961; Member Deutsche
Akademie der Naturforscher «Leopoldina» (Cothenius
Medal, 1963); Foreign Honorary Member, Accademia Nazionale
dei Lincei, 1963; Honorary Fellow, Exeter College, Oxford;
Honorary Member, American Philosophical Society, 1964; Hon.
Sc.D. (Cantab.), 1960; Baly Medal, Royal College of Physicians,
1961; Hon. D.Sc., University of Tasmania, 1964; Hon. Fellow, Magdalen
College, Oxford; Hon. Member, American Neurological Association;
Hon. LL. D., University of Melbourne, 1965; Hon. Life Member,
New York Academy
of Sciences; Foreign Associate, National Academy of Sciences, 1966; Hon. D.Sc.,
University of
British Columbia, Vancouver; Hon. D.Sc., Gustavus Adolphus
College, 1967; Hon.Fellowship, American College of
Physicians; Hon. D.Sc., Marquette University; Honorary Member, Accademia
Medica Lombarda; Hon. Fellow, Indian Academy of Sciences, 1968;
Hon. Member, Czechoslovak Medical Society J. E. Purkyne;
Associate Member, Académie Royale de Belgique, 1969; Hon. M.D.,
Charles
University, Prague; Hon. D.Sc., Loyola University, Chicago; Hon. M.D.,
Yeshiva
University, New York.
In 1928 John Carew Eccles married Irene Frances Miller of
Motueka, New Zealand, and there are nine children; four sons and
five daughters, of whom the two eldest sons are scientists with
Ph. D.'s. Rosamond collaborated with her father in much of his
neurophysiological research, his son Peter is a radar
meteorologist. Following divorce in 1968, Eccles married Helena
Táboríková of Prague, Czechoslovakia, who is an
M.D. of Charles University and a neurophysiologist. They
collaborate in their research.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Sir John Eccles died on May 2, 1997.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1963
MLA style: "Sir John Eccles - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 13 Feb 2012 http://www.nobelprize.virtual.museum/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1963/eccles.html
