He obtained his medical doctorate in Leipzig in 1821, then furthered his education in Vienna, Berlin, London and Paris.
In 1825 he became an associate professor for pathology in Leipzig, and in the meantime performed duties as a "free-lance" eye physician.
[1][2] In Leipzig, he also served as a physician at St. Georg Hospital (1825–53),[2] and in 1843, following the death of Johann Christian August Heinroth, he was given additional duties as a "part-time chair" of psychiatry.
[2] In 1887 a new building for the Leipzig Conservatory was constructed by way of a donation from Radius.
[4] In 1910, the Radiusstraße, a thoroughfare in the Lindenau district of Leipzig, was named after him and his wife, Wilhelmine.