William Harvey — "The arteries are the channels through which the blood is driven from the heart."
The arteries are the channels through which the blood is driven from the heart.
The arteries are the channels through which the blood is driven from the heart.
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"The physician must be a man of experience."
"The heart is the household divinity which, discharging its function, nourishes, cherishes, quickens the whole body."
"The world is full of wonders, but man is the greatest wonder of all."
"The heart is the beginning of life; the sun of the microcosm, even as the sun in his turn might well be designated the heart of the world; for it is the heart by whose virtue and pulse the blood is mo…"
"The more accurately we search into the wonderful works of God, the more a reason we shall find to admire them."
English physician whose On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals (1628) demonstrated blood circulation, overturning 1,400 years of Galenic medicine. Closely associated with Francis Bacon (his contemporary in the new English empiricism). For an intellectual contrast, see Galenic medicine, the 2nd-century Greek medical tradition (humors, blood-as-consumed-fuel) — Harvey calculated that the heart pumps more blood per hour than the body could possibly produce as fuel — a single quantitative observation that demolished the entire Galenic-Aristotelian medical worldview. The cleanest example in medical history of arithmetic disproving 14 centuries of authority.
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Blood vessels called arteries carry blood away from the heart, acting as conduits that distribute oxygenated blood throughout the body under pressure generated by the heart's pumping action. This describes the directional flow and functional relationship between the heart and arterial system, establishing that circulation is active and driven rather than passive or spontaneous.
Harvey, a 17th-century English physician, revolutionized medicine by demonstrating through systematic experimentation that blood circulates continuously rather than being consumed and produced by organs. This statement reflects his 1628 masterwork De Motu Cordis, where he proved the heart mechanically drives blood through arteries, overthrowing Galenic theory he had studied but dared to challenge.
In Harvey's early modern era, Galenic medicine still dominated European universities, teaching that blood ebbed and flowed like tides and was consumed by tissues. Harvey's anatomical dissections and quantitative reasoning directly contradicted 1,400 years of received wisdom, occurring during a scientific revolution that saw Galileo and Kepler similarly overturn ancient authority through observation and mathematics.
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