Look, watch again and watch again...

Jean-Martin Charcot, born in Paris on November 29, 1825 and died in Montsauche-les-Settons on August 16, 1893, was a French neurologist, professor of the clinic of nervous diseases at the Paris Faculty of Medicine and academician.
Look, watch again
and always look at:
That's the only way we can see.

Discoverer of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a neurodegenerative disease to which his name has been given in French-speaking medical literature, he is the founder, with Guillaume Duchenne, of modern neurology, one of the great promoters of clinical medicine and a major figure in positivism. In 1868 he was the first to describe multiple sclerosis (MS).
In 1987, the Charcot Foundation was created by the Belgian MS Study Group, an association of Belgian neurologists who are experts in multiple sclerosis. The aim: to defeat the disease through fundamental research.