Abstract William Harvey’s Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis in Animalibus (1628) transformed the history of medicine by demonstrating that blood circulates continuously through the body under the action of the heart. Harvey’s discovery directly challenged the Galenic medical tradition that had dominated European medicine for over thirteen centuries. Galen’s physiology held that blood was continually produced in the liver, consumed by the tissues, and distributed through separate venous and arterial systems. Harvey overturned these assumptions through anatomical observation, vivisection, quantitative experimentation, and mechanical reasoning. This paper examines the foundations of Galenic medicine, Harvey’s methodology and arguments for circulation, contemporary reactions to his work, and the broader implications of his discoveries for the Scientific Revolution and the emergence of modern medicine. Harvey’s achievement represented not merely a physiological discovery but a profound epistemological shift from authority-based knowledge toward experimental science.
Jerry Asquith (Fri,) studied this question.
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