Education
From 1817 he studied medicine at Friedrich Wilhelms-Institut in Berlin, having designs on a career as a military physician.
Botanist mycologist university professor
From 1817 he studied medicine at Friedrich Wilhelms-Institut in Berlin, having designs on a career as a military physician.
The appellation "Schultzenstein" is a reference to his birthplace. This was necessary to distinguish him from his contemporary Carl Heinrich "Bipontinus" Schultz, also a German botanist. In 1825 he became an associate professor of medicine.
He later traveled to Paris, where he advanced his theories involving the circulation of sap in plants.
In 1833 he obtained the title of full professor He was a proponent of Goethe"s mystical "nature-philosophy" view of the natural world.
In his investigations of the vascular system in plants, he promoted ideas on its function being analogous to the circulatory system of animals.