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Dissection and Vivisection in the European Renaissance
Roger Kenneth French
出版
Ashgate
, 1999
主題
History / General
History / Historiography
History / Europe / Medieval
History / Europe / Renaissance
Medical / Anatomy
Medical / Forensic Medicine
Medical / History
Nature / Animal Rights
Science / Life Sciences / Human Anatomy & Physiology
ISBN
1859283616
9781859283615
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=lNwPAQAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Why did medical men of the European Middle Ages and Renaissance make it a central point of medical education to cut the bodies of condemned criminals into their smallest parts, and perform experiments on vivisected animals? Neither had any direct medical relevance, and the purpose of this book is to discover what lay at the basis of these practices, what purpose they served and what cultural circumstances made them possible and desirable. The book offers a series of answers based on the religious, intellectual and social circumstances that were particularly European. Beliefs about the body and soul, the compartmentalised nature of late medieval academic and intellectual life, the economic pressures and market forces that governed the trade of medicine and the specialty of anatomy are all examined. The illustrations generated by these circumstances and by the arts of the woodcut and of printing are given special attention.