Article ID: CBB062599708

Evolution of the myth of the human rete mirabile traced through text and illustrations in printed books: The case of Vesalius and his plagiarists (2022)

unapi

Andreas Vesalius initially accepted Galen’s ideas concerning the rete mirabile in humans. In 1538, Vesalius drew a diagram of the human rete mirabile as a plexiform termination of the carotid arteries, where the vital spirit is transformed into the animal spirit, before being distributed from the brain along the nerves to the body. In 1540, Vesalius demonstrated the rete mirabile at a public anatomy, using a sheep’s head (due to his nascent realization that he could not demonstrate this adequately in a human cadaver, potentially eliciting ridicule). By 1543, Vesalius had fully reversed himself, denied the existence of the rete mirabile in humans, and castigated himself for his prior failure to recognize this error in Galen’s works. Vesalius nevertheless illustrated both the Galenic conception of the rete mirabile in humans and a schematic of the rete mirabile in ungulates. He intended the 1543 diagram of the human rete mirabile as an example of a mistake that resulted from Galen’s overreliance on animals as models of human anatomy. However, in spite of Vesalius’s intentions, for more than a century afterward, his figure was repeatedly and perversely plagiarized by advocates for Galenic doctrine, who misused it as a purportedly realistic representation of human anatomy and generally omitted the contrary opinions of Berengario da Carpi and Vesalius. The protracted use of stereotyped representations of the rete mirabile in extant printed illustrations provides tangible documentation of the stagnation in anatomical thought in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

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Authors & Contributors
Nutton, Vivian
Vesalius, Andreas
Barras, Vincent
Compier, Abdul Haq
Fahrer, Marius
Gadebusch Bondio, Maria Carla
Journals
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
ANZ Journal of Surgery
Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali
Histoire des Sciences Médicales
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
Medical History
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Brepols Publishers
Brill
Éditions BHMS
Karger
Oxford University Press
Concepts
Medicine
Human anatomy
Anatomy
Scientific illustration
Visual representation; visual communication
Human body
People
Vesalius, Andreas
Galen
Gesner, Konrad
Albinus, Bernard Siegfried
Cardano, Girolamo
Carter, Henry Vandyke
Time Periods
16th century
Renaissance
Early modern
17th century
19th century
Places
Belgium
Italy
London (England)
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