Lanska, Douglas J. (Author)
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.
...More
Book
Vivian Nutton;
(2017)
Principles of Anatomy according to the Opinion of Galen by Johann Guinter and Andreas Vesalius
Article
Lanska, Douglas J.;
(2014)
Vesalius on the Anatomy and Function of the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerves: Medical Illustration and Reintroduction of a Physiological Demonstration from Galen
Article
Philippe Gailloud;
(2025)
Early depiction of anterior spinal arteries and veins in André du Laurens’s Historia anatomica humani corporis (1600)
Article
Amanda Taylor;
(2018)
The Compounded Body: Bodily Knowledge Production in the Works of Andreas Vesalius and Edmund Spenser
Article
Vons, Jacqueline;
(2006)
L'Epitome, un ouvrage méconnu d'André Vésale (1543)
Thesis
Jacob Murel;
(2022)
(In)Stability and (Re)Creation in the English Print Reception of Vesalian Anatomical Illustrations: A Material-Hermeneutical and Text Analytic Study in Transnational Early Modern Bibliography
Book
Vivian Nutton;
(2024)
Andreas Vesalius and his Fabrica, 1537-1564: Changing the World of Anatomy
Book
Vesalius, Andreas;
Garrison, Daniel H.;
(2015)
Vesalius, the China Root Epistle: A New Translation and Critical Edition. Translated by Garrison, Daniel H.
Article
Siraisi, Nancy G.;
(1997)
Vesalius and the reading of Galen's teleology
Book
Richardson, Ruth;
(2008)
The Making of Mr. Gray's Anatomy: Bodies, Books, Fortune and Fame
Article
Cynthia Klestinec;
(2018)
Vesalius among the Surgeons
Article
Vivian Nutton;
(2018)
1538, A Year of Vesalian Innovation
Book
Rose Marie San Juan;
(2023)
Violence and the Genesis of the Anatomical Image
Book
Dániel Margócsy;
Somos, Márk;
Joffe, Stephen N.;
(2018)
The Fabrica of Andreas Vesalius: A Worldwide Descriptive Census, Ownership, and Annotations of the 1543 and 1555 Editions
Book
Kusukawa, Sachiko;
(2012)
Picturing the Book of Nature: Image, Text, and Argument in Sixteenth-Century Human Anatomy and Medical Botany
Book
Fabrizio Bigotti;
(2020)
Physiology of the Soul: Mind, Body and Matter in the Galenic Tradition of Late Renaissance, 1550-1630
Article
Gabriele Marasco;
(2011)
Gerolamo Cardano: tradition classique et réalités nouvelles dans l'anatomie et dans la chirurgie à l'epoque de la Renaissance
Article
Compier, Abdul Haq;
(2012)
Rhazes in the Renaissance of Andreas Vesalius
Chapter
Gadebush Bondio, Mariacarloa;
(2006)
Exempla medicorum: quelques remarques sur un chapitre négligéde l'histoire de la médecine
Book
Vincent Barras;
(2015)
Anatomies : De Vésale au virtuel
Be the first to comment!