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who lived in Egypt in the time of the first Ptolemy, distinguished nerves as the organs of the will,10 and Rufus, who lived in the time of Trajan,11 divides the nerves into sensitive and motive, and derives them all from the brain. But this did not imply that men had yet distinguished the nerves from the muscles. Even Galen maintained that every muscle consists of a bundle of nerves and sinews.12 But the important points, the necessity of the nerve, and the origination of all this apparatus of motion from the brain, he insists upon with great clearness and force. Thus he proved the necessity experimentally, by cutting through some of the bundles of nerves,13 and thus preventing the corresponding motions. And it is, he says,14 allowed by all, both physicians and philosophers, that where the origin of the nerve is, there the seat of the soul (hypμovikov Tūs vxis) must be: now this, he adds, is in the brain, and not in the heart.

Thus the general construction and arrangement of the organization by which voluntary motion is effected, was well made out at the time of Galen, and is found distinctly delivered in his works. We cannot, perhaps, justly ascribe any large portion of the general discovery to him: indeed, the conception of the mechanism of the skeleton and muscles was probably so gradually unfolded in the minds of anatomical students, that it would be difficult, even if we knew the labours of each person, to select one, as peculiarly the author of the discovery. But it is clear that all those who did materially contribute to the establishment of this doctrine, must have possessed the qualifications which we find in Galen for such a task; namely, clear mechanical views of what the tensions of collections of strings could do, and an exact practical acquaintance with the muscular cordage which exists in the animal frame;in short, in this as in other instances of real advance in science, there must have been clear ideas and real facts,

10 Sprengel, i. 534.

12 Ib. ii. 152. Galen, De Motu Musc. p. 553.
14 De Hippocr. et Plat. Dog. viii, 1.

11 Ib.ii. 67.

13 Ib. 157.

unity of thought and extent of observation, brought into contact.

Sect. 2.-Recognition of Final Causes in Physiology. Galen.

THERE is one idea which the researches of the physiologist and the anatomist so constantly force upon him, that he cannot help assuming it as one of the guides of his speculations; I mean, the idea of a purpose, or, as it is called in Aristotelian phrase, a final cause, in the arrangements of the animal frame. It is impossible to doubt that the motive nerves run along the limbs, in order that they may convey to the muscles the impulses of the will; and that the muscles are attached to the bones, in order that they may move and support them. This conviction prevails so steadily among anatomists, that even when the use of any part is altogether unknown, it is still taken for granted that it has some use. The developement of this conviction, -of a purpose in the parts of animals,-of a function to which each portion of the organization is subservient,

-contributed greatly to the progress of physiology; for it constantly urged men forwards in their researches respecting each organ, till some definite view of its purpose was obtained. The assumption of hypothetical final causes in Physics may have been, as Bacon asserts it to have been, prejudicial to science; but the assumption of unknown final causes in Physiology, has given rise to the science. The two branches of speculation, Physics and Physiology, were equally led, by every new phenomenon, to ask their question, Why? But, in the former case, 'why' meant through what cause ? in the latter, 'for what end?' And though it may be possible to introduce into physiology the doctrine of efficient causes, such a step can never obliterate the obligations which the science owes to the pervading conception of a purpose contained in all organization.

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This conception makes its appearance very early. Indeed, without any special study of our structure, the thought, that we are fearfully and wonderfully made,

forces itself upon men, with a mysterious impressiveness, as a suggestion of our Maker. In this bearing, the thought is developed to a considerable extent in the well-known passage in Xenophon's Conversations of Socrates. Nor did it ever lose its hold on soberminded and instructed men. The Epicureans, indeed, held that the eye was not made for seeing, nor the ear for hearing; and Asclepiades, whom we have already mentioned as an impudent pretender, adopted this wild dogma.15 Such assertions required no labour. 'It is easy,' says Galen,16 'for people like Asclepiades, when they come to any difficulty, to say that Nature has worked to no purpose.' The great anatomist himself pursues his subject in a very different temper. In a well-known passage, he breaks out into an enthusiastic scorn of the folly of the atheistical notions. 17 Try,' he says, 'if you can imagine a shoe made with half the skill which appears in the skin of the foot.' Some one had spoken of a structure of the human body which he would have preferred to that which it now has. 'See,' Galen exclaims, after pointing out the absurdity of the imaginary scheme, 'see what brutishness there is in this wish. But if I were to spend more words on such cattle, reasonable men might blame me for desecrating my work, which I regard as a religious hymn in honour of the Creator.'

Galen was from the first highly esteemed as an anatomist. He was originally of Pergamus; and after receiving the instructions of many medical and philosophical professors, and especially of those of Alexandria, which was then the metropolis of the learned and scientific world, he came to Rome, where his reputation was soon so great as to excite the and hatred of the Roman physicians. The emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus would have retained him near them; but he preferred pursuing his travels, directed principally by curiosity. When he died, he left behind him numerous works, all of them of great

envy

15 Sprengel, ii. 15. 16 De Usu Part. v. 5, (on the kidneys.) 17 De Usu Part. iii. 10.

value for the light they throw on the history of anatomy and medicine; and these were for a long period the storehouse of all the most important anatomical knowledge which the world possessed. In the time of intellectual barrenness and servility, among the Arabians and the Europeans of the dark ages, the writings of Galen had almost unquestioned authority;18 and it was only by an uncommon effort of independent thinking that Abdollatif ventured to assert, that even Galen's assertions must give way to the evidence of the senses. In more modern times, when Vesalius, in the sixteenth century, accused Galen of mistakes, he drew upon himself the hostility of the whole body of physicians. Yet the mistakes were such as might have been pointed out and confessed 19 without acrimony, if, in times of revolution, mildness and moderation were possible; but an impatience of the superstition of tradition on the part of the innovators, and an alarm of the subversion of all recognized truths on the part of the established teachers, inflame and pervert all such discussions. Vesalius's main

charge against Galen is, that his dissections were performed upon animals, and not upon the human body. Galen himself speaks of the dissection of apes as a very familiar employment, and states that he killed them by drowning. The natural difficulties which, in various ages, have prevented the unlimited prosecution of human dissection, operated strongly among the ancients, and it would have been difficult, under such circumstances, to proceed more judiciously than Galen did.

I shall now proceed to the history of the discovery of another and less obvious function, the circulation of the blood, which belongs to modern times.

18 Sprengel, ii. 359. 19 Cuv. Leçons sur l'Hist. des Sc. Nat. p. 25.

CHAPTER II.

DISCOVERY OF THE CIRCULATION OF THE BLOOD.

THE

Sect. 1.-Prelude to the Discovery.

HE blood-vessels, the veins and arteries, are as evident and peculiar in their appearance as the muscles; but their function is by no means so obvious. Hippocrates1 did not discriminate Veins and Arteries; both are called by the same name (λéßeç); and the word from which artery comes (aprnpin) means, in his works, the windpipe. Aristotle, scanty as was his knowledge of the vessels of the body, has yet the merit of having traced the origin of all the veins to the heart. He expressly contradicts those of his predecessors who had derived the veins from the head;2 and refers to dissection for the proof. If the book On the Breath be genuine (which is doubted), Aristotle was aware of the distinction between veins and arteries. 'Every artery,' it is there asserted, 'is accompanied by a vein; the former are filled only with breath or air.'3 But whether or no this passage be Aristotle's, he held opinions equally erroneous; as, that the windpipe conveys air into the heart. Galen5 was far from having views respecting the blood-vessels, as sound as those which he entertained concerning the muscles. held the liver to be the origin of the veins, and the heart of the arteries. He was, however, acquainted with their junctions, or anastomoses. But we find no material advance in the knowledge of this subject, till we overleap the blank of the middle ages, and reach the dawn of modern science.

He

The father of modern anatomy is held to be Mon

1 Sprengel, i. 383. De Spiritu, v. 1078.

2 Hist. Animal. iii, 3.

4 Spr. i. 501.

5 Ib. ii. 152.

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