Max Verworn


Max Richard Constantin Verworn was a German physiologist who was a native of Berlin.
He studied medicine and natural sciences in Berlin, and later moved to Jena, where he furthered his studies with Ernst Haeckel and William Thierry Preyer. In 1895 he became a professor at the University of Jena, and in 1901 a professor at the physiological institute at Göttingen. Later, as successor to Eduard Pflüger, he became a professor at the University of Bonn. In 1902 he founded the journal Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Physiologie, and was its publisher until his death in 1921.
Max Verworn is remembered for his research in the field of experimental physiology, and especially for his work involving cellular physiology. He did extensive studies of the elementary physiological processes that take place in muscle tissue, nerve fibers and sensory organs. He conducted research in the fields of phylogenesis and ontogenesis. Verworn was influenced by Haeckel's theory of evolutionism and considered that all physiological phenomena seen in higher animals may already be recognizable in the most basic forms of life.
In his opposition to the concept of causalism, he proposed "conditionalism" to describe a state or process determined by totality of its processes.
He undertook investigations into human creativity and thought processes. In his studies of art, he believed that there were two types of style and aims of artistic representation. These two concepts he called "physioplastic" and "ideoplastic". He described physioplastic as direct reproduction of the object or its immediate image in memory, and ideoplastic as an intuitive attempt to create what the eye sees.
He was the first recipient of the Carus Prize from the "Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina" in 1896 for his work in the area of physiology.

Selected written works

With Eugen Korschelt, Gottlob Eduard Linck, Friedrich Oltmanns, Karl Schaum, Hermann Theodor Simon and Ernst Teichmann, he was co-author of the Handwörterbuch der naturwissenschaften.