Born: May 1, 1852

Nationality: Spanish

In the late 19th century, scientists believed the brain was a tangled web, much like a continuous mass with no clear structure. Then came Santiago Ramón y Cajal, a Spanish scientist who revealed that the brain is made up of individual cells — called neurons — each communicating in a vast, organized network.

Cajal wasn’t just a scientist. He was an artist, and a relentless observer. At a time when technology was limited, he relied on hand-drawn sketches to map the brain’s architecture. His work laid the foundation for modern neuroscience, influencing everything from brain surgery to artificial intelligence. In 1906, he was awarded the Nobel Prize, but his real legacy lives on in every neuron diagram we see today.

Top achievements:
1. Nobel Prize in Medicine (1906)
2. Founded modern neuroanatomy
3. Created iconic neuron drawings still used today

His work’s impact:
Everything from brain surgery to AI neural networks traces back to his discovery of brain cells and clusters.


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