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The first publications on the presence of renin, angiotensino gen
and angiotensin-like material in brain tissue appeared about ten
years ago. This coincided with the discovery of new biological
actions of angiotensin in the brain and with the reinvestigation of
already known central angiotensin effects. The possibility that
angiotensin could be generated within the brain itself had
therefore exciting implications. With the recent popularity of
brain neuropeptides, interest in this area is even increasing. The
discovery of renin-like activity as well as angiotensino gen and
angiotensin in the brain has led, admittedly by inductive
inference, to the hypothesis of the existence of a complete
endogenous renin-angiotensin system in the brain.1 For several
years there was ardent discussion whether such a renin angiotensin
system existed in the brain or not. Inductive inference always
contains "an irrational element or a creative intuition."2In view
of the biological relevance of a brain angiotensin system,
deductive testing of the hypothesis was a worthwhile scientific
project taken up by a number of investigators As a matter of
principle it is not given to science, to reach either truth or
falsity, scientific statements can only attain contmous degrees of
probability whose unat tamable upper and lower limits are truth or
falsity. However, several of the early singular statements and
results turned out to be reproducible and acceptable. The theory
has thus so far passed its test and we have found no reason to
discard it."
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