Article ID: CBB706708786

Blood Money: Harvey's De motu cordis (1628) as an Exercise in Accounting (2018)

unapi

William Harvey's famous quantitative argument from De motu cordis (1628) about the circulation of blood explained how a small amount of blood could recirculate and nourish the entire body, upending the Galenic conception of the blood's motion. This paper argues that the quantitative argument drew on the calculative and rhetorical skills of merchants, including Harvey's own brothers. Modern translations of De motu cordis obscure the language of accountancy that Harvey himself used. Like a merchant accounting for credits and debits, intake and output, goods and moneys, Harvey treated venous and arterial blood as essentially commensurate, quantifiable and fungible. For Harvey, the circulation (and recirculation) of blood was an arithmetical necessity. The development of Harvey's circulatory model followed shifts in the epistemic value of mercantile forms of knowledge, including accounting and arithmetic, also drawing on an Aristotelian language of reciprocity and balance that Harvey shared with mercantile advisers to the royal court. This paper places Harvey's calculations in a previously underappreciated context of economic crisis, whose debates focused largely on questions of circulation.

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Authors & Contributors
McMullen, Emerson Thomas
Bylebyl, Jerome J.
Young, John Riddington
Whitteridge, Gweneth
Toellner, Richard
Reines, Brandon P.
Journals
Vesalius
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
Georgia Journal of Science
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza
Medical History
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
Publishers
Routledge
Nivola Libros y Ediciones
Johns Hopkins University Press
Concepts
Circulation of the blood
Heart
Medicine
Anatomy
Human anatomy
Animal experimentation
People
Harvey, William
Descartes, René
Riolan, Jean
Pecquet, Jean
Glisson, Francis
Gassendi, Pierre
Time Periods
17th century
16th century
Places
England
London (England)
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