| John Conrad Amman | 1669-1724 | A Swiss physician practicing in the   Netherlands who wrote about instruction for the deaf and for those who   stuttered. | 
  
    | Francis Bacon | 1561-1626 | A British   statesman and philosopher said to be the father of experimental   science. He set out principles of induction that became an important turning   point in western scientific studies. | 
  
    | Juan Pablo Bonet | 1579-1633 | Bonet   advocated using a one-handed manual alphabet to training the deaf. He   attached great importance to early intervention and a consistent language   environment. He also advocated the early teaching of speech on the basis of   the manual alphabet and the printed word, arguing that the lack of early   speech training is an impediment to later speech development. | 
  
    | John Bulwer | 1606-1656 | a   physician who advocated the use of a universal gesture system for expressing   words and abstract concepts. He developed a technique for lip reading by the   deaf. | 
  
    | Jerome Cardan | 1501-1576 | developed   the idea of substituting one sense for another. He used visual signs to teach   deaf students to read. | 
  
    | John Comenius | 1592-1670 | known as   the father of modern education. He was a Czech educational reformer and   religious leader. His lasting contributions were language teaching picture   books, especially ones that taught Latin to Dutch speaking children. | 
  
  
    | George Dalgarno | 1628-1687 | published   a treatise on deafness and on the education of the deaf in 1680. Dalgarno   advocated a natural method, believing that language for the deaf could be   developed as is language for children with normal hearing. He placed great   emphasis on early intervention, advocated finger spelling, and advocated that   his manual alphabet be placed in the hornbook for teachers to teach all   children. | 
  
    | Leonardo da Vinci | 1452-1519 | best   known as a painter, da Vinci was also mathematician, anatomist, and engineer.   He dissected the human body, demonstrating for the first time the maxillary   sinus and the moderator band. He also depicted the fetus in utero | 
  
    | Rene Descartes | 1596-1650 | a French   mathematician and philosopher, considered to be the father of analytic   geometry. His philosophy is based on the rationalistic premise "I think,   therefore I am." He wrote on ventricular theory and other medical   matters. | 
  
    | Jean Francois Fernel | 1497-1558 | a French physician who systematized medieval medicine. Besides being   the first to use the term physiology, he was the first to describe   appendicitis as an inflammation of the appendix, the first to talk about   peristalsis, and the first to describe the spinal canal. | 
  
    | William Harvey | 1578-1657 | an English physician who was the first in the Western world to discover and describe blood   circulation. He provided in detail the direction of circulation and the   properties of blood as it was pumped by the heart through the body. | 
  
    | William Holder | 1616-1698 | taught Alexander   Popham, a young deaf boy in 1659. He taught the student to write, copying   letters of the alphabet. He also used a “distinctive features” approach to   teach speech reading, relying on context to differentiate sounds from one   another. | 
  
    | John Locke | 1632-1704 | the founder of British   empiricism and promoted experimental studies in medicine and science. | 
  
    | Francis Lodowyck | 1619-1694 | a phonetician who   published three well-known books on language. He invented a symbol system   represented ideas or concepts which could be realized in any language. He   also proposed a phonetic alphabet in which related sounds were denoted by   related symbols. | 
  
    | Hieronymus Mercurialis | 1530-1606 | a Greek and Latin   scholar and physician who wrote extensively about speech disorders. In his   chapter in the book on children entitled On injuries to speech in general, Mercurialis   identified stuttering as hesitation of the tongue. He saw the condition as   one in which people were compelled to repeat the first syllable of words. | 
  
    | Paracelsus | 1493-1541 | a Swiss alchemist, physician, and astrologer. He countered Galen’s humoral   concept of disease and substituted for it a chemical approach. He found the   relationships between head wounds and paralysis and observed that defects of   speech could occur in the absence of paralysis. | 
  
    | Ambroise Pare | 1510-1590 | a French physician and   one of the most reknown surgeons of the European early modern period. Prior   to Pare’s work as a surgeon, physicians considered surgery beneath their   dignity, assigning the task to barber-surgeons. | 
  
    | Pablo Ponce de Leon | 1520-1584 | a teacher of the deaf. His   method began with reading and writing and then moved on to teaching speech. He   used a manual alphabet in instruction. He also used methods of association. For   example, he taught meaning by pointing to the object associated with the   written word. | 
  
    | Peter Ramus | 1515-1572 | a French scholar who   taught at the University of Paris. He followed the lead of the Dutch humanist   Rudolph Agricola (1444-1485) by returning attention to the study of   dialectic, an area of rhetoric. | 
  
    | Franciscus Mercury van   Helmont | 1614-1698 | was part   of a 17th century effort to uncover universal languages. In 1667   he published a The Alphabet of Nature in which he argued that Hebrew was a proto-language and one that was   closest to how the speech organs were intended to be used. He worked   to show that the sounds of Hebrew were the ones most easily reproduced by the   human vocal organs. | 
  
    | Andreas Vesalius | 1514-1564 | a Flemish anatomist who published a highly influential book: On   the fabric of the human body, in 1543. His systematic dissections and the   drawings in his book revolutionized the conception of various organs of the   body and broke tradition with Galenic medicine. | 
  
  
    | John Wallis | 1618-1703 | taught   two deaf students to speak, one, named Alexander Popham was previously a   student of William Holder. Both Wallis and Holder claimed to be the first to   teach the deaf to speak. Their battle for being first ended up being their   main claim to fame as contributors to deaf history. | 
  
    | John Wilkins | 1614-1672 | a   mathematician and natural philosopher and a key player in the Universal   Language movement in England in the mid 17th century. | 
  
    | Thomas Willis | 1621-1675 | a British physician. He published Anatomy of the Brain (1664), Pathology   of the Brain (1667), and The Mind of Animals (1672), describing   the nervous system and its blood supply. He argued that the cerebellum was an   organ in charge of the execution of involuntary movements. |