(1)In the middle of my major class, the professor said Galvanismimage text translation
(2)They asked me what I meant
(3)I was in the middle of digging for the face makeup
(4)I remember that Frankenstein skill is Galvanism, I don’t remember what Galvanism is, but I only remember Frankenstein’s
(5)I think it’s a word about bioelectricity
(6)The etymology says, “Looking at the etymology, it seems to have something to do with bioelectricity,” but the professor admires and the second grader knows Galvani
(7)He pretended to be really close and asked another professor to trade me for his graduation thesis
(8)And I was kidnapped from graduate school and rolled around, and then I got a master’s degree and ran
(1)Luigi Galvani of Italyimage text translation
(2)Luigi Aloisio Gavani Luigi Aloisio Gavani September 9, 1737 – December 4, 1798, was an Italian anatomist and physiologist. Born in Bologna, he studied theology and medicine at the University of Bologna, where he later became a professor of anatomy at his alma mater. In 1780, he saw convulsions develop when the frog’s leg, which he dissected, touched the anatomical diagram He argued with Alessandro Volta, who thought it was caused by bioelectricity and said it was caused by potential differences between different types of metals It became a limit for Volta to invent batteries He contributed greatly to the development of electrophysiology and electromagnetism