Herophilus and vivisection: a re-appraisal

Authors

  • J Ganz Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine, Ulverston (UK). Author

Keywords:

Herophilus, vivisection, dissection, Galen, Alexandria

Abstract

There were cultural taboos against dissecting dead bodies in both Ancient Greece and Ancient Egypt. Yet in Alexandria under the reigns of Ptolemy I (Soter) and Ptolemy II (Philadelphus), such dissection was carried out by Herophilus, leading to outstanding new knowledge of human anatomy. The original writings of Herophilus no longer exist, but they were known to Galen and presumably also to Celsus, who lived a century before Galen. Celsus wrote a passage in the introduction to his ‘De Medicina’ in which he describes vivisection undertaken in Alexandria by Herophilus and his own opposition to it. Whether Celsus was relating the facts or just the information available to him has been debated for nearly two millennia. This paper presents certain everyday experiences from the operating theatre and argues that these experiences make it unlikely that vivisection would be used to demonstrate anatomy.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Acar F., Naderi S., Guvencer M., Türe U., Arda M.N.

erophilus of Chalcedon: A Pioneer in Neuroscience.

eurosurgery. 2005. Vol. 56. P. 861‒867.

Lassek A.M. Human Dissection: Its Drama and Struggle. Springfield I.L. Illinois: Charles C. Thomas,Publisher, 1958.

Lorenz H. Ancient Theories of the Soul. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford: Stanford University, 2009. P. 1‒41.

Santoro G., Wood M.D., Merlo L., Anastasi G.P.,Tomasello F., Germano A. The Anatomic Location of the Soul from the Heart, through the Brain to the whole Body and beyond: A Journey through Western History,Science and Philosophy. Neurosurgery. 2009. Vol. 65.

P. 633–643.

Von Staden H. The Discovery of the Body: Human Dissection and Its Cultural Contexts in Ancient Greece.

he Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 1992.

ol. 65. N 3. P. 223–241.

Chapman P.H. The Alexandrian Library: Crucible of a Renaissance. Neurosurgery. 2001. Vol. 49. P. 1–14.

Wiitse L.L., Pait T.G. Herophilus of Alexandria (325‒255 B.C.): The Father of Anatomy. Spine. 1998.

ol. 23. N 17. P. 1904–1914.

Von Staden H. Herophilus: The Art of Medicine in Early Alexandria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.

Celsus. De Medicina Book I (Spencer W.G., trans.).

ambridge MA, Harvard University Press, 1938.

Tertullianus Q.S.F. A Treatise on the Soul. (Translated Peter Holmes.) http://www.tertullian.org/anf/anf03/

nf03-22.htm#P2560_840932. Accessed July 3rd, 2014.

Wellendorf H. Ptolemy’s Political Tool: Religion. Studia Antiqua. 2008. Vol. 6. N 1. P. 33−38.

Dobson J.F. Herophylus of Alexandria. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 1925. Vol. 18. P. 19–32.

Longrigg J. Anatomy in Alexandria in the Third Century BC. British Journal History of Science. 1988. Vol. 21.

P. 455–488.

Lloyd G.E.R. Methods and Problems in Greek Science.

ambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991. P. 356–360.

Ganz J.C., Arndt J. A History of Depressed Skull Fractures from Ancient Times to 1800. Journal of the History of the Neurosciences. 2014. Vol. 23. N 3.

–251.

Downloads

Published

2014-08-31

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite