Ivor Lloyd Tuckett

Ivor Lloyd Tuckett (1873–1942) was a British professor of physiology, physician, and author.

Born in London, he studied natural science and physiology at Trinity College, Cambridge between 1890 and 1894, where he was awarded the degrees of BA (1893-4), MA (1897), and MD (1910). He was a physician at University College Hospital and was made a Fellow of University College London.[1]

Tuckett practised as an ophthalmologist in Norwich and on the Isle of Wight. He held interests in yacht racing and became known as an exposer of the false claims of spiritualists. He is best known for his book The Evidence for the Supernatural: A Critical Study Made with "Uncommon Sense" (1911). The book exposed the tricks of fraud mediums and is a criticism of the claims of psychical phenomena. It received a positive review in the British Medical Journal.[2]

From 1896 to 1910 Tuckett was an active researcher and published many papers in the Journal of Physiology. He wrote an important paper on the structure of non-meduallated nerve fibres. He was elected a member of the Physiological Society in 1896.[3]

Publications

References

  1. W. J. O'Connor. (1991). British Psysiologists: 1885-1914: A Biographical Dictionary. Manchester University Press. p. 26
  2. A Study Of Psychical Research. (1912). British Medical Journal. Vol. 1, No. 2667. pp. 308-309
  3. British Journal of Ophthalmology. 1943 March: 27(3): 143

External links

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