Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
Fundamental importance of anatomy. Human anatomy. Hippocrates, Aristotle, Galen, Vesalius. Comparative anatomy. Georges Cuvier. Johannes Müller. Carl Gegenbauer. Histology. The cellular theory. Schleiden and Schwann. Kölliker. Virchow. Man a vertebrate—a tetrapod—a mammal — a placental — a primate. Prosimiæ and simiæ. The catarrhinæ. Papiomorphic and anthropomorphic apes. Essential likeness of man and the ape in corporal structure.
All biological research, all investigation into the forms and vital activities of organisms, must first deal with the visible body, in which the morphological and physiological phenomena are observed. This fundamental rule holds good for man just as much as for all other living things. Moreover, the inquiry must not confine itself to mere observation of the outer form; it must penetrate to the interior, and study both the general plan and the minute details of the structure. The science which pursues this fundamental investigation in the broadest sense is anatomy.
The first stimulus to an inquiry into the human frame arose, naturally, in medicine. As it was usually practised by the priests in the older civilizations, we may assume that these highest representatives of the education of the time had already acquired a certain amount of anatomical knowledge two thousand years before Christ, or even earlier. We do not, however, find more exact observations, founded on the dissection of mammals, and applied, by analogy, to the human frame, until we come to the Greek scientists of the sixth and fifth centuries before Christ—Empedocles (of Agrigentum) and Democritus (of Abdera), and especially the most famous physician of classic antiquity, Hippocrates (of Cos).
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