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(1452-1519)
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[[File:J. Playfair McMurrich.jpg|thumb|alt=J. Playfair McMurrich|J. Playfair McMurrich (1859 – 1939)]]
[[File:J. Playfair McMurrich.jpg|thumb|alt=J. Playfair McMurrich|J. Playfair McMurrich (1859 – 1939)]]
Carnegie Institution Of Washington Publication No. 411 (1930)
Carnegie Institution Of Washington Publication No. 411 (1930)


By
By
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Professor of Anatomy, University of Toronto
Professor of Anatomy, University of Toronto


 
Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, probably by himself. Royal Palace, Turin (Anderson)
Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, probably by himself. Royal Palace, Lurin (Anderson)




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BY
By The Williams & Wilkins Company, Baltimore
 
J. PLAYFAIR McMURRICH
 
Professor of Anatomy, University of Toronto
 
 
PUBLISHED FOR
 
CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON
 
BY
 
THE WILLIAMS & WILKINS COMPANY
 
BALTIMORE
 


==Table of Contents==
==Table of Contents==
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McMurrich JP. Leonardo da Vinci - the anatomist. (1930) Carnegie institution of Washington, Williams & Wilkins Company, Baltimore.

   Leonardo da Vinci (1930): 1 Introductory | 2 Anatomy from Galen to Leonardo | 3 Possible Literary Sources of Leonardo’s Anatomical Knowledge | 4 Anatomical Illustration before Leonardo | 5 Fortunes and Friends | 6 Leonardo’s Manuscripts, their Reproduction and his Projected Book | 7 Leonardo’s Anatomical Methods | 8 General Anatomy and Physiology | 9 Leonardo’s Canon of Proportions | 10 The Skeleton | 11 The Muscles | 12 The Heart | 13 The Blood-vessels | 14 The Organs of Digestion | 15 The Organs of Respiration | 16 The Excretory and Reproductive Organs | 17 The Nervous System | 18 The Sense Organs | 19 Embryology | 20 Comparative Anatomy | 21 Botany | 22 Conclusion | References | Glossary of Terms | List of Illustrations
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This is a draft version of McMurrich's 1930 anatomy history textbook on Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519).



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Leonardo da Vinci - The Anatomist

(1452-1519)

J. Playfair McMurrich
J. Playfair McMurrich (1859 – 1939)

Carnegie Institution Of Washington Publication No. 411 (1930)

By

J. Playfair McMurrich

Professor of Anatomy, University of Toronto

Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, probably by himself. Royal Palace, Turin (Anderson)


Leonardo da Vinci

THE ANATOMIST

(1452-1519)


By The Williams & Wilkins Company, Baltimore

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Author’s Preface

Preface by George Sarton

Chapter I Introductory

Chapter II Anatomy from Galen to Leonardo

Chapter III Possible Literary Sources of Leonardo’s Anatomical Knowledge

Chapter IV Anatomical Illustration before Leonardo

Chapter V Fortunes and Friends

Chapter VI Leonardo’s Manuscripts, their Reproduction and his Projected Book

Chapter VII Leonardo’s Anatomical Methods

Chapter VIII General Anatomy and Physiology

Chapter IX Leonardo’s Canon of Proportions

Chapter X The Skeleton

Chapter XI The Muscles

Chapter XII The Heart

Chapter XIII The Blood-vessels

Chapter XIV The Organs of Digestion

Chapter XV The Organs of Respiration

Chapter XVI The Excretory and Reproductive Organs

Chapter XVII The Nervous System

Chapter XVIII The Sense Organs

Chapter XIX Embryology

Chapter XX Comparative Anatomy

Chapter XXI Botany

Chapter XXII Conclusion


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, probably by himself. Royal Palace, Turin

(Anderson) Frontispiece

Fig. 1. An “Anatomy.” From the Fasciculo di Medicina (Venice, 1493). After the facsimile published by C. Singer, Florence,

1925, p. 64 18

Fig. 2. A dissection by Guido da Vigevano (1345). Archiv fur Ge schichte der Medizin, vol. 7, pi. 1, 1914 19

3. Situs figure from the Fasciculus medicinse (1491). After the

facsimile published by K. Sudhoff and C. Singer, Milan, p. 10, 1924 35

4. Leonardo’s Situs figure. (QI, 12) 38

5. A Wound Man. Title page of the Book of Cirurgia by Hieronymus Brunschwig (Strassburg, 1497) 40

6. Situs figure from Peyligk’s Philosophise Naturalis Compendium

(Leipzig, 1499). After K. Sudhoff, Studien zur Geschichte der Medizin, Heft 8, pi. 7, 1909 42

7. Situs figure from the Antropologium, de hominis dignitate of

Magnus Hundt (Leipzig, 1501). After Choulant 44

8. The brain and sense organs from the Antropologium of Magnus Hundt (Leipzig, 1501). After Sudhoff, Studien, Heft 8, pi.

9, 1909 45


Fig.


Fig.

Fig.

Fig.


Fig.


Fig.


Fig. 9. Situs figure from the Spiegel der Artzny of Laurentius Phryesen

(Strassburg, 1518) 47

Fig. 10. Transverse sections of the leg. (QV, 20.) 88

Fig. 11. Figures in which the muscles of the leg are represented by cords

or wires. (QV, 4.) 89

Fig. 12. Figures of the surface anatomy of the leg with a comparison of the hip muscles of a man and a horse, the muscles being

represented by cords or wires. (QV, 22.) 90

Fig. 13. The figure of a man inscribed in a circle and in a square. A

drawing in the Royal Academy, Venice (Anderson) 105

Fig. 14. Figure illustrating the proportions of the head. (QVI, 1.) 106

Fig. 15. Figure showing the lines of measurement used in determining

the proportions of the leg. (QVI, llv.) 106

Fig. 16. Figures illustrating the proportions of the face and eye. A

drawing in the Royal Palace, Turin (Anderson) 107

Fig. 17. Proportions of the human body in the standing, kneeling and

sitting postures. (QVI, 8.) 110


IX


X


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


Fiq. 18. The Bone Man from the Priifling five-figure series (1158).

From Sudhoff, Studien, Heft 1, pi. 13, 1907 Ill

Fig. 19. Skeleton from a Provengal manuscript in the University Library, Basel, Codex D II, 11 (End of thirteenth century). From

Sudhoff, Studien, Heft 4, pi. 1, 190S 112

Fig. 20. Skeleton from the Dresden Codex No. 301 (1323). From

Sudhoff, Studien, Heft 4, pi. 6, 1908 113

Fig. 21. Skeleton from the De arte phisicali of John Arderne (circa 1412).

From Sudhoff, Studien, Heft 8, pi. 3, 1915 115

Fig. 22. Skeleton by Richard Helain (1493). From Sudhoff, Archiv,

vol. 1, p. 57, 1907 118

Fig. 23. Skeleton from the British Museum Additional Ms. No. 21618.

From Sudhoff, Archiv, vol. 8, p. 140, 1915 119

Fig. 24. The vertebral column by Leonardo. (AnA, 8v.) 120

Fig. 25. The cervical vertebra. (AnA, 8v.) 121

Fig. 26. The skull cut to show the frontal and maxillary sinuses. (AnB,

41v.) 121

Fig. 27. The bones of the arm in supination and pronation, together

with the scapula and biceps muscle. (AnA, lv.) 123

Fig. 28. The bones of the hand, with a dissection of the tendons and

ligaments of the fingers. (AnA, lOv.) 124

Fig. 29. Various figures of the bones of the foot with a sketch of the

bones of the shoulder. (AnA, 12.) 125

Fig. 30. The Muscle Man from the Raudnitz five-figure series (1399).

From Sudhoff, Archiv, vol. 3, pi. 12, 1910 128

Fig. 31. The abdominal muscles from Pietro di Abano’s Conciliator differentiarum (1496). From Sudhoff, Archiv, vol. 3, pi. 2,

1910 129

Fig. 32. The muscles of the neck and shoulder. (AnA, 3v.) 136

Fig. 33. Two representations of the muscles of the back and shoulder.

(AnA, 16.) 137

Fig. 34. A cord diagram of the muscles supposed to stabilize the cervical vertebra in movements of the head. Also a sketch showing the insertions of muscles into the spine of a vertebra. (QII,

5v.) 138

Fig. 35. Diagrammatic representation of the superior serratus posterior

and the serratus anterior. (Q0, 8.) 139

Fig. 36. The muscles of the shoulder, trunk and leg. (AnA, 15v.) 140

Fig. 37. Figures showing the form of the diaphragm. (QI, 5.) 140

Fig. 38. The abdominal muscles. (QI, 5.) 140

Fig. 39. The scapular and brachial muscles. (AnA, 2.) 143

Fig. 40. The muscles of the arm and forearm. (AnA, 9v.) 144

Fig. 41. Dissections of the muscles, tendons and ligaments of the hand

and fingers. (AnA, 19.) 145


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xi

Fig. 42. The muscles and tendons of the sole of the foot. (AnA, 11.). . 146 Fig. 43. Diagram of the structure of the heart in Ioannes Adelphus’ edition of Mondino’s Anathomia (Strassburg, 1513). After C.

Singer, Fasciculo di medicina, vol. 1, fig. 59, 1925 150

Fig. 44. Two figures of the heart. (QII, 3v.) 152

Fig. 45. Dissection of the heart showing papillary muscles and a moderator band. (QII, 14.) 153

Fig. 46. The thoracic and abdominal viscera, the heart dissected and showing several moderator bands in each ventricle. (QIV,

7.) 156

Fig. 47. Sketches of the base of the heart and of the papillary muscles

and chordae tendineae of the left ventricle. (QIV, 14.) 157

Fig. 48. The tricuspid valve from above and from below, showing the

attachments of the chordae tendineae. (QII, 8v.) 158

Fig. 49. Studies of the vortices in the pockets of the semilunar valves.

(QIV, 11.) 165

Fig. 50. Figures illustrating the comparison of the heart and bloodvessels with a sprouting nut with its plumule and radicle.

In the figure to the right the azygos vein is well shown.

(AnB, 11.) 165

Fig. 51. The superficial veins of the arm and a sketch comparing the

arteries of a centenarian with those of a child. (AnB, 10.) . 170

Fig. 52. Early study of the heart and blood-vessels. (QV, 1.) 171

Fig. 53. Dissections of the heart, lungs, abdominal viscera and bloodvessels. (QIII, lOv.) 172

Fig. 54. The great vessels of a centenarian. (AnB, 33.) 173

Fig. 55. The superficial pectoral and epigastric veins. (AnA, 6.) 174

Fig. 56. Figures of the hepatic artery and portal vein. (AnB, 34v.) . . . 175

Fig. 57. The iliac vein and its branches. (AnB, 6v.) 176

Fig. 58. The hypogastric vessels and the umbilical vein. Above is a frontal section through the cervical vertebrae showing the

costotransverse foramina. (AnB, 4.) 177

Fig. 59. An early sketch of the digestive tract and longitudinal and

transverse sections of the penis. (QIII, 3v.) 181

Fig. 60. Above a supposed arrangement of the intestine; below the stomach, liver and spleen with splenic vein; to the right the caecum

and appendix. (AnB, 14v.) 183

Fig. 61. A second arrangement of the intestines. To the right suggestion as to the mode of entrance of the ureter into the bladder.

(AnB, 14.) 184

Fig. 62. The lungs, diaphragm, liver, stomach and spleen of an animal.

(AnB, 37 v.) 188

Fig. 63. The mesentery. (AnB, 3.) 189

Fig. 64. The great omentum with the hypogastric vessels and the umbilical vein. To the left the deep epigastric veins. (AnB, 22v.) . 190


Xll


LIST OF ILLUSTRATION'S


Fig. G5. Dissection of the neck, in which an animal’s larynx is represented as human. (QV, 16.) 191

Fig. 66. Various figures of the larynx and trachea. The surface modeling of the leg. (AnA, 3.) 192

Fig. 67. The heart and bronchi after maceration away of the lung parenchyma. To the right representations of the bronchi.

(QII, 1.) 193

Fig. 68. Sketch of the lungs and heart, showing the pleural cavities.

(QIV. 3.).... 195

Fig. 69. The male organs of reproduction. (QIII, 4.) 199

Fig. 70. The female organs of reproduction. (QI, 12.) 200

Fig. 71. A section through the skull and brain showing the brain membranes. (QV, Ov.) 204

Fig. 72. The ventricles of the brain and the cranial nerves. (QV, 8.). . 204

Fig. 73. The ventricles of the brain and a view of its base. (QV, 7.). . 204

Fig. 74. Cerebral localization. From G. Reisch: Margarita philosophise (Strassburg, 1504). After C. Singer: Fasciculo di

medicina, part 1, fig. 69, 1925 207

Fig. 75. Figure showing the course and distribution of the reversive (vagus) nerve. To the right a longitudinal section of the

trachea. (AnB, 33v.) 211

Fig. 76. Figures showing the arrangement of the brachial plexus. (AnB,

23 v.) 212

Fig. 77. Another figure of the brachial plexus. (AnB, 3v.) 212

Fig. 78. The lumbo-sacral plexus. (AnB, 6.) 212

Fig. 79. Figure showing the course of the long saphenous nerve. (QV,

20 v.) 214

Fig. 80. The branching of the common iliac vessels and the sciatic nerve.

(QIV, 9.) 214

Fig. 81. The cervical portion of the spinal cord, showing the origins of the spinal nerves and what may be a suggestion of the ganglion ated cord. (AnB, 23.) 215

Fig. 82. Diagram of the structure of the eye. (CA, 337 II., A.) 218

Fig. 83. Diagram showing two possibilities of refraction within the eye.

(D, 10.) 218

Fig. 84. Two figures of the membranes and circulation of the fetal calf.

(AnB, 28.) 230

Fig. 85. Representations of the human fetus at term and of the ungulate

placenta. (QIII, 8.) 231

Fig. 86. Diagram of the umbilical and hypogastric vessels. (AnB,

29 v.) 232

Fig. 87. Diagram of the human fetal circulation. (QI, 1.) 233

Fig. 8S. Dissection of the foot of a bear. (QV, 11.) 237

Fig. 89. Dissection of a bird’s wing. (QIV, 1.) 242


Author’s Preface

In attempting to evaluate even one only of the activities of so manyminded a man as Leonardo da Vinci, one is, perforce, led far afield beyond the topics that are of immediate concern, in order that one may endeavor to see these in their proper environment and perspective. The friends who have aided me in these extra-territorial studies have been many, too many to mention individually, but to one, Dr. George Sarton, I am especially indebted. It was at his suggestion that I undertook the study, of which what follows is the result, and throughout its progress his thorough knowledge and clear understanding of the history of mediaeval and Renaissance science have always been at my disposal. He also kindly undertook the preparation of the photographs required for the illustrations, many of these being taken from works in his own library, others from volumes in the Harvard Library and the Boston Medical Library.


To these two libraries I wish to express thanks for the courtesies afforded and I also desire to make grateful acknowledgments to the Library of the University of Toronto, the Toronto Public Reference Library, the Library of the British Museum, and the London Library for the opportunities and privileges granted for the study of the works of Leonardo in their possession. The Leonardo drawings have been reproduced from the facsimile editions enumerated in the bibliography at the end of this volume, except three of them derived from photographs of the firm D. Anderson of Rome. Some pre-Leonardian documents have been borrowed from the publications of Karl Sudhoff and Charles Singer, whose courtesy is appreciated. More specific acknowledgments will be found in the list of illustrations below. Finally I am deeply indebted to Dr. R. K. George for assistance in proof-reading and for the preparation of the index.


J. Playfair McMurrich

University of Toronto

December 16, 1929


Preface

It is always useful to place a work in its historical perspective. The reader’s interest in it is awakened or increased as soon as he knows its genesis and development. This preface is primarily meant to gratify such legitimate curiosity. The fact that I can not speak of the genesis of Dr. McMurrich’s work without speaking of my own studies will not be brought against me, I hope. It can not be helped.

When I was appointed Associate in the History of Science by the Carnegie Institution of Washington in 1918, I undertook to make a thorough study of Leonardo’s thought. 1 However, I soon realized that a proper appreciation of it would be impossible without a deep and accurate knowledge of mediaeval science. To measure Leonardo’s originality it was necessary to be able to distinguish the mediaeval elements which he had assimilated. But was it expedient to include these mediaeval investigations, which are almost endless, in a history of Leonardo’s thought? Was it wise to write a history of mediaeval science around his own personality? After all, however mediaeval Leonardo had remained, the Middle Ages were one thing and Leonardo was another. It was better not to mix the two stories. The example unconsciously given by the great French scholar, Pierre Duhem, was a good warning. His Etudes sur Leonard de Vinci (3 vols., Paris, 19061913) were really misnamed. Duhem devoted considerably more space to mediaeval than to Leonardian thought. This seemed to me a bad method. It would be at once simpler and more rigorous to make as complete an inventory of mediaeval knowledge as possible, studying each layer of it independently and in due succession. Thus w T ould we know how much knowledge each age had added to that of the preceding ones, and when Leonardo’s age would finally be reached, the analysis of his own thought would become relatively easy. I foolishly thought that the making of that inventory — the drawing of that intellectual map of the Middle Ages — would take only a couple of years. That was in 1918-19. I am writing this in August 1929, more than ten years later, and I know that many more years will elapse before the task is completed and Leonardo finally overtaken.


To return to the present work, I realized happily at the very beginning that there was a part of Leonardo’s activity, a major part, for which the investigation of mediaeval sources was relatively simpler and less essential, than was Leonardo’s anatomy. Whatever Leonardo had learned from books, it is clear that the mainspring of his anatomical knowledge was to be found in his own autopsies. In this field as opposed to others (e.g., mechanics, optics, geology) once that the need of direct observation had been really understood — and this was on the whole Leonardo’s outstanding contribution, the source of every one of his discoveries — the observations themselves were relatively easier. Anatomical facts are more tangible than geological and mechanical facts. It is not necessary to isolate them from others; they are already isolated. This does not mean that anatomical observations were easy, far from it, but the program of observation was more obvious in this field than in any other, and the harvest more abundant. Thus with regard to Leonardo’s anatomy, thfe general procedure might reasonably be reversed. Instead of studying the past first, and climbing up to Leonardo, century by century, year by year, it would be legitimate in this case to begin by investigating his drawings and comparing them with the anatomical realities. However, this could be done only by a professional anatomist. Leonardo’s drawings could not be understood nor their genuineness and correctness appreciated except by one thoroughly familiar with the objects represented. A theoretical knowledge of anatomy was in itself insufficient for such a task. The historian must be able to visualize the anatomical details which the artist interpreted — remember, a drawing is always an interpretation — he must be able to recall their very appearance under similar conditions.

1 Carnegie Inst. Wash. Year Book No. 18, 1919, 347-349,

This situation having been explained to the President of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, he approached Dr. McMurrich, who kindly agreed to undertake this important share of the Leonardo project. This was very fortunate, for Dr. McMurrich is not only one of the leading anatomists of America, a man of considerable experience, but he has shown a lifelong interest in the history of anatomy. In him are happily blended the technical and historical qualifications, the scientific and artistic leanings, which are but too often dissociated, and yet which are equally essential for the making of a complete historian of science.


This was more than ten years ago. Many and heavy were the duties — scientific, educational, and administrative — heaped upon Dr. McMurrich’s shoulders, and to Leonardo he could but give his leisure hours. The Carnegie Institution was not impatient. It knew it was losing nothing by waiting a little longer, and that in the fulness of time the task which Dr. McMurrich had promised to undertake would be accomplished.


And here it is! No further introduction of it is needed, and this preface might end here. But the author will forgive me if I take advantage of his book to say a few words of the studies on the history of science which have been promoted by the Carnegie Institution. This is necessary because the activities of the Institution are so many and so diversified, that very few people realize what it has already done in our own field. Its publications on the History of Science, important as they are, are lost among many others, which are probably just as important if not more, but deal with other subjects.


The Institution’s first effort in that direction was to publish the Collected Mathematical Works of George William Hill (4 vols., 1907). Later two ancient catalogues of stars were carefully edited, Ptolemy’s, by C. H. F. Peters and E. B. Knobel (1915); Ulugh Beg’s, by Knobel alone (1917). A fundamental History of the Theory of Numbers was composed by L. E. Dickson (3 vols., 1919-23). Nearer to the present work is George W. Corner’s Anatomical Texts of the Earlier Middle Ages (1927). Finally I may be permitted to mention my own Introduction to the History of Science, of which volume 1, From Homer to Omar Khayyam, appeared in 1927; volume 2, From Rabbi ben Ezra to Roger Bacon, is almost ready to be printed; Volume 3, dealing with the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, will probably be ready in 1933. An assistant, Dr. A. Pogo, is preparing materials for Volume 4, to be devoted to the sixteenth century. It should be noted that while the volumes of my Introduction appear necessarily at distant intervals, they were all begun by me at the same time. That is, materials for these four volumes, and for many subsequent ones, have been systematically collected by me since 1911. A great many of these materials have been published, as they became available, in Isis, since 1913.


These explanations are not given solely for the sake of the Carnegie Institution, though it was worthwhile to bring into light a part of its abundant activity which is generally unknown. There is, I believe, a better reason for giving them. The reader will be helped by them to realize the existence of a new branch of knowledge, of an independent discipline, having its own unity, its own organization, its own methods, and deserving as well as any other to occupy the whole of a scholar’s attention and energy. How strange it is, that in this age of science, it should be considered perfectly natural for a man to dedicate all of his time to, say, American or Canadian history, and that hardly any are allowed to devote themselves with the same continuity to a subject which is far more difficult, because it is at once more complex and less standardized? And yet is not the History of Science the very core of the history of culture? How else can we measure man’s progress, except by the growth of his knowledge? Indeed the history of mankind is essentially the history of a gigantic struggle between light and darkness, between knowledge and ignorance. As the light gradually conquers the surrounding gloom, as science gradually destroys superstition, as rationality gradually replaces irrationality, and order, chaos, so— and not otherwise — does civilization increase. Just think of that and then remember that our universities provide for the study of every kind of history, except the very one which would enable us to understand the progress and the very nature of civilization.


The main trouble with our studies is not so much that they are neglected, but that they are considered fair game for any kind of amateurish efforts. This is of course a natural consequence of the fact that only a very few men are given an opportunity to engage in them as a profession. In so much as so few scientists have yet realized it, one could not repeat too often that the History of Science is itself a legitimate branch of science, that it is just as scientific as we make it, and that for it as for other branches, no good can ever be expected out of idle dilettantism or hasty book making. Whatever advance is made in our knowledge of it, will be due exclusively to honest and patient efforts, such as those made by Dr. McMurrich during the last ten years.


Nowhere does Leonardo’s peculiar genius appear more clearly than in these anatomical investigations. To use the author’s striking comparison “Vesalius was undoubtedly the founder of modern anatomy — Leonardo was his forerunner, a St. John crying in the wilderness.” Leonardo’s originality was due not only to his inherent genius, to the penetration and comprehensiveness of his mind, but also to his ignorance — I almost said, to his innocence. To speak of him as an Hellenist is ridiculous; he was not even a Latinist. We have evidence from his Manuscripts that his knowledge of Latin was very meager. It is probable that he had never made a systematic study of it in his youth; apparently he tried to make up for that deficiency in later years, but we all know that a man’s linguistic limits are largely determined before maturity, especially when his life is a busy one and when he has consecrated himself to a definite and inflexible purpose. Leonardo’s knowledge of Latin was that empirical knowledge which an intelligent Italian would easily obtain, in the quattrocento even more easily than now, because the Italian language was then so much nearer to its Latin origins. It was sufficient for simple needs, but utterly insufficient for abundant reading. Thus Leonardo was mercifully spared the oppressive load of that dialectical and empty learning which had accumulated since the ruins of ancient science and made true originality more and more difficult. To be sure, that learning was not wholly barren, but the little amount of gold which it contained, the timid attempts at experimentation, would filter through to such a man as Leonardo in more than one way. Such experimental knowledge did not need a learned language to be transmitted; nay, it would reach the botteghe of artists and craftsmen more directly than the cabinets of scholars. Thus the best of mediaeval science would be sure to reach Leonardo’s inquisitive mind, while the dross was kept out by the insuperable barrier of his ignorance.


And yet such is the strength and pervasiveness of tradition that in spite of his prophylactic ignorance and aloofness, Leonardo could not entirely escape its prejudices. The barrier was not insuperable after all. There is nothing to prove that he had read Galen. Of course he knew Galen and spoke of him even as most of our contemporaries speak of Einstein or Freud without ever having read them. The physiological knowledge which had been transmitted to him by Mondino, Chauliac, or Benedetti, or better still by the intermediary of his conversations with surgeons or brother craftsmen, that knowledge was purely Galenic. Galenic prejudices were part of the very atmosphere which he was breathing; they were beyond the need of scrutiny or dispute. And so it was that this keen observer saw things not always with his own eyes, but sometimes with those of Galen! The best example of this aberration is Leonardo’s reference to the heart’s septum as sievelike. Not only does it occur repeatedly in his notes, but he even drew a portion of the septum showing pores which do not exist. Galen’s triumphant dogmatism made even a Leonardo see the inexistent. But for this illusion which sidetracked him hopelessly, Leonardo might conceivably have discovered the circulation of the blood before Harvey, for he had as much anatomical and mechanical knowledge as was needed. He had all that was necessary to see the truth, except that in this particular case he was blinded by an overpowering prejudice.


One could not illustrate better the limitations of genius. A man of genius sees further than his fellowmen, further and more clearly, but for all that his range of vision is limited. Leonardo was an extraordinary man, yet he belonged to his environment — fifteenth century Italy — almost as completely as his humbler contemporaries. What else could we expect? This father of modern science was still in many respects a child of the Middle Ages.


This is very well proved in Dr. McMurrich’s memoir. He has admirably brought out not only the outstanding merits of Leonardo’s anatomical studies, their thoroughness and originality, but also their weaknesses, which had to be acknowledged, though they were almost unavoidable. Indeed his purpose was not to write a panegyric but to make a conscientious analysis of Leonardo’s anatomy. He shows clearly how much of it was truly new and prophetic of our modern knowledge, but he also shows and with equal clearness that much of it was less original, or even entirely conventional and wrong. Leonardo was the greatest scientist of his time, but he was imperfect and fallible, even as the greatest scientists of our own time, and for that matter, of all times. One of the main lessons that the History of Science can teach us is this very one — the continual growth of man, and his continual, if slowly decreasing, imperfection.


To conclude I wish to express in the author’s name as well as in my own, our deep gratitude to the Institution, whose enlightened generosity encouraged the preparation of this work and made its publication possible.

George Sarton

Cambridge, Massachusetts,

August 1929


Leonardo da Vinci

THE ANATOMIST (1452-1519)


Ille velut fidis arcana sodalibus olim Credebat libris: ncque, si male gesserat usquam Decurrens alio, ncque si bene — quo fit , ut omnis Votiva pateat veluti descripia tabella, Vita senis.


Horace. Sat. II, I, 30.



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Pages where the terms "Historic" (textbooks, papers, people, recommendations) appear on this site, and sections within pages where this disclaimer appears, indicate that the content and scientific understanding are specific to the time of publication. This means that while some scientific descriptions are still accurate, the terminology and interpretation of the developmental mechanisms reflect the understanding at the time of original publication and those of the preceding periods, these terms, interpretations and recommendations may not reflect our current scientific understanding.     (More? Embryology History | Historic Embryology Papers)
   Leonardo da Vinci (1930): 1 Introductory | 2 Anatomy from Galen to Leonardo | 3 Possible Literary Sources of Leonardo’s Anatomical Knowledge | 4 Anatomical Illustration before Leonardo | 5 Fortunes and Friends | 6 Leonardo’s Manuscripts, their Reproduction and his Projected Book | 7 Leonardo’s Anatomical Methods | 8 General Anatomy and Physiology | 9 Leonardo’s Canon of Proportions | 10 The Skeleton | 11 The Muscles | 12 The Heart | 13 The Blood-vessels | 14 The Organs of Digestion | 15 The Organs of Respiration | 16 The Excretory and Reproductive Organs | 17 The Nervous System | 18 The Sense Organs | 19 Embryology | 20 Comparative Anatomy | 21 Botany | 22 Conclusion | References | Glossary of Terms | List of Illustrations


Reference: McMurrich JP. Leonardo da Vinci - the anatomist. (1930) Carnegie institution of Washington, Williams & Wilkins Company, Baltimore.


Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, April 20) Embryology Book - Leonardo da Vinci - the anatomist (1930). Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Book_-_Leonardo_da_Vinci_-_the_anatomist_(1930)

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