Hans Much
Born | 1880 |
Died | 1932 |
Related eponyms
Biography of Hans Much
Hans Much studied in Hamburg, Kiel, Berlin, and Würzburg, where he obtained his doctorate in 1903. He then went to the hygienical institute Behring in Marburg as assistant, becoming head of department in 1905. In 1907 Hermann Albert Dietrich Lenhartz (1854-1910) called him to Hamburg-Eppendorf, where he subsequently worked as head of the institute for experimental therapy, serology and bacteriology, and for 10 years was head of the tuberculosis research institute. He became titular professor in 1914, professor extraordinary in 1919.
Besides his medical works, Much was also a prolific author of works on art history, philosophy and popular literature, as well as history of medicine. He was a co-founder of the Bund für buddhistisches Leben, a society of Buddhists.
Bibliography
- Pathologische Biologie. Leipzig, 1911.
- Die Immunitätswissenschaft. Würzburg, C. Kabitsch, 1911.
- Eine Tuberkuloseforschungsreise nach Jerusalem. Leipzig, 1913.
- Krankheitsentstehung und Krankheitsverhütung. Leipzig, 1913.
- Kindertuberkulose. Leipzig, 1920; 3rd to 5th edition, 1923.
- Die Partigengesetze und ihre Allgemeingültigkeit. Leipzig, 1921.
- Moderne Biologie. A series of more than 15 booklets. Leipzig 1921-1931.
- Hippokrates der Grosse. Berlin, 1926.
- Das Wesen der Heilkunst. Darmstadt, 1928.
- Was ist das Leben. Leipzig, 1929.
- Steht die scholastische Medizin vor einem unvermeidlichen Bankrott? Leipzig, 1930.
- L. R. Grote:
Die Medizin der Gegenwart in Selbstdarstellungen. Volume 4, page 189; Leipzig, 1925. - Rainer Wirtz:
Leben und Werk des Hamburger Arztes, Forschers und Schriftstellers Hans Much (1880-1932) unter besonderer Berücksichtigung seiner medizintheoretischen Schriften.
Doctoral dissertation, Rheinisch-Westfälische technische Hochschule 22.03.1991.
Zugl.: Studien zur Medizin-, Kunst- und Literaturgeschichte; Bd. 26. Herzogenrath 1991. - A.A. Friedländer:
Hans Much. Münchener medizinische Wochenschrift, 1933, 80: 23-24.