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William Harvey: The Bridge to the Scientific Revolution
by G. Stolyarov
II
Before the world could bask in the light of
the Scientific Revolution a revision of the medical contributions of ancient
physicians such as Aristotle and Galen needed to separate fact from
unsubstantiated theory from worthwhile theory. A synthesis of empirical
observation with mathematical extrapolation needed to take place which
simultaneously rejected the Dogmatist school’s literal adherence to age-old
texts and the absolute discarding of principles elucidated therein. This bridge
between old and new, a pivotal figure in the progress of medicine, was William
Harvey (1578-1657), private physician to King James I of England and leading
researcher in the areas of anatomy and cardiology.
William Harvey was a
proficient student who attended some of the most prominent educational
institutions of his time, completing his bachelor’s degree at Cambridge
University by the age of twenty and proceeding to Italy and the University of
Padua, which was renowned for its medical finesse and a most original and
insightful professor, Hieronymus Fabricius, an observational anatomist under
whom Harvey first began to question a theory of circulation that had held the
status of a rigid, immutable paradigm for some fifteen
centuries.
According to Susan Wiegand, “Fabricius had observed the
one-way valves in veins, but had not figured out exactly what their role was.
The popular belief of the day held that blood was circulated by a sort of
pulsing action of the arteries.” As a matter of fact, it was not recognized by
Galen that the veins and arteries were in any manner connected. The veins and
arteries were thought to carry distinct “varieties of blood.” Blood in the
arteries was deemed frothier than that of the veins, and its ebullition, that
is, expansion in volume due to “heat” provided by the heart, and subsequent
contraction were believed to cause the beats one frequently perceives in one’s
chest. The heart was not thought to be a muscle on its own accord whose function
was to pump blood to various portions of the organism and re-circulate blood
which flowed to it. But, as Harvey hypothesized, Fabricius’s observation
implied a connection of the veins to elsewhere, the arteries, and thus the
homogeneity of the blood circulating throughout the entire human body.
As
documented in Harvey’s 1628 volume that details his discoveries, An
Anatomical Study of the Motion of the Heart and of the Blood in Animals,
blood from the veins and the arteries clots in precisely the same manner,
neither “variety” denser or less formidable than the other. This, of course,
signified that no breach could possibly exist between the two “types”, which
were in reality one and the same. Hence, Harvey suggested the theory of the
cyclical motion for blood, having drawn upon Aristotle’s discovery of the
evaporation and condensation cycles of moisture within the Earth’s atmosphere
for a phenomenon somewhat paralleling the one he endeavored to describe. In this
manner Harvey was able to furnish accurate models of the human circulatory
system without ever having obtained direct visual verification for the existence
of capillaries between the veins and arteries, which the Italian scientist
Marcello Malphighi, slightly after Halley’s death, was able to spot via a
microscope.
In his studies Harvey also explored the structure of the
heart itself. He observed that the heart functioned in a manner similar to that
of a water bellows with two valves near the aorta which delivered the blood from
and through the lungs into its confines. This was an explanation which
paralleled the heart to a “flexible mechanism”, not a rigid pump whose every
fluctuation was identical to the last, but an organic structure with a range of
motions, all nevertheless comprehensible. Scalding criticisms from the
hard-liners of the Galenic school reveal the nature of the mysticism his
discovery had toppled. Hoffman, one of his principal opponents, remarked,
“Truly, Harvey, you are pursuing the incalculable, the inexplicable, the
unknowable.” But in truth, Harvey had demolished a centuries-old orthodoxy of
collective subjectivism, the perpetuator of medieval murk, which had arbitrarily
substituted divine whim for mathematical natural law and thus discarded the need
for experimentation as a gateway to true knowledge. The Galenics had thus, since
any objective means of cognition were repressed, relied on the sheer
authoritative weight of their forebear’s pronouncements. Harvey, however,
comprehended that no automatic, intrinsic “insight” and no truth by virtue of
antiquity alone were possible. He was determined in his field of study to begin
with a tabula rasa, a blank slate, and accept no theory unless an
empirical sighting or a laboratory test verified it.
However, his
approach was not one of an intellectually crippled Deweyite empiricist, merely
gathering data without synthesizing it into a cohesive a posteriori
scientific theory. His style closely mirrored that of Aristotle, who was,
according to Ayn Rand, “the father of the scientific method”, and a thinker
whose works had been introduced to Harvey at Cambridge by philosophy professor
Cesare Cremonini. Both Cremonini and Harvey had been students of Fabricius and
resorted to an epistemological approach upheld by the Aristotelian school.
Harvey identified a passage from Aristotle as his guiding principle in the
formulation of his systems: “Faith is to be given to reason if the things which
are being demonstrated agree with those which are perceived by sense: when they
have become adequately known the sense should be trusted more than reason. Hence
we ought to approve or disapprove or reject everything only after a very finely
made examination.” Harvey’s strategy is sensible, especially given modern
examples of dogmatism in the sciences in such theories contrary to empirical
observation as the Big Bang, Global Warming, and Keynesian economics, the latter
of which is responsible for the cancer of the welfare state that has so
grievously usurped the autonomy of diligent, scientifically-oriented physicians.
Had greater weight been bestowed upon satellite data that showed no significant
increases in the Earth’s temperature, or Dr. Halton Arp’s astronomic
observations of redshift as a distinct property of quasi-stellar objects (and
not a sign of “the universe’s expansion”), or Ludwig von Mises’ and Milton
Friedman’s commonsense demonstrations of the free market as a source of
universal prosperity, based in part on the analysis of progress in the
nineteenth century, such fallacies would have been debunked with startling
rapidity. Because, according to another prodigious physician-philosopher, John
Locke, “all men are liable to error”, the synthesis of empiricism and
rationalism, observation followed by explanation, serves as a check on chance
mathematical miscalculations or theoretical non sequiturs and is able to amend
temporary errors of knowledge while preserving those aspects of reality which
are both demonstrable and explicable by the scientific mind.
Harvey’s
approach toward calculation was also in accord with Aristotelian methodology.
His quantitative analysis was sufficient for proof of particular phenomena, such
as circulation of the blood and the heart’s role as the central “bellows.” Yet
he exhibited what Professor Andrew Gregory termed “roughness.” Perhaps
considering the range of various fluctuations the heart can undertake, it was
fitting for Harvey to grant leeway to his figures in examining fundamental
properties that would be applicable to the heart regardless of the
strength of whatever individual beat the heart had last performed. Professor
Gregory claims that simply because Harvey employed mathematics only
approximately, he possessed little commonalities with the mainstream of the
Scientific Revolution. However, this is a fallacious claim because it perceives
a dichotomy between the approach of the ancients and that of the Enlightenment
discoverers. Despite the Enlightenment’s correction of mistaken theoretical
beliefs dating from the Classical period, some of its most prominent thinkers,
Hooke and Goethe in optics, Boyle in chemistry, had evaluated both the
qualitative and quantitative aspects of their subject matters, employing sensory
analysis where numbers alone where insufficient. The fact that Aristotle would
not have disapproved of Harvey’s technique merely reinforces its genuinely
modern/scientific character. If, for example, Harvey had not employed the
qualitative observation of all blood clotting in the same manner, would he even
have considered comparing the viscosities of venous and arterial
fluids?
Perhaps others of Harvey’s contemporaries comprehended the impact
of his studies to a greater extent than himself. Descartes, for example, was
fascinated by Harvey’s system as a verification that natural law and material
causation could be detected in organic processes as well as mechanical ones.
Harvey, however, happened to be a theist and considered a divine agent,
coordinating a universal “purpose”, to play a role in animating blood and acting
as its ultimate “mover”. Harvey was correct in suggesting that the universe
possessed a logical order by which it functioned and that the comprehension of
that order is essential to human mastery of the universe and, in Harvey’s
particular case, human mastery over man’s own circulatory system’s well-being.
However, this Descartes did not deny. Descartes merely wished to substitute a
synthesis of mathematical formulae and mathematical principles for an
anthropomorphic cosmic boss, “God”, and embrace the diametrical opposite of
Hoffman’s mysticism of inexplicability: the hypothesis that, with exploration
and experimentation, man’s mind could comprehend all the mechanisms that
operated in his body. Harvey may have discredited such a “novel extreme” in word
due to his reluctance to part with a theological paradigm that had dominated the
Western world for fifteen centuries prior, yet throughout his work and
throughout his methodology is implied a support for Descartes’ ambitions in
deed. Let us forgive Harvey’s slight blunder in smuggling a morsel of ancient
fallacy into his convictions along with a plethora of ancient brilliance. After
all, “all men are liable to error.”
Harvey’s
theories were subject to contentious dispute on the part of the Galenic school
during the discoverer’s lifetime. Peter Landry reveals that Harvey himself
ignored his critics for the majority of his career, refusing, like Ayn Rand’s
Howard Roark, to become mired in pleading his case to men who had already
rejected the epistemological means, observation and the scientific method, by
which to process the content of Harvey’s breakthroughs and recognize the
validity thereof. However, in 1649 he at last published a small volume where he
presented thorough counters to his critics. Within a year, the truth of Harvey’s
propositions was grasped by the majority of the medical and scientific
community. Harvey was the rare fortunate genius whose prowess was recognized
during his lifetime and fueled his further explorations, as the elderly
physician acquired an interest in embryology and accurately predicted the
cellular interactions involved in the generation of offspring two hundred years
before sufficiently powerful microscopes developed to verify his correctness…
with no substantial flaws in his interpretation! Once again, Harvey deduced his
theory from meticulous exploration of animal anatomy, as documented in his 1651
book, Essays on the Generation of Animals.
Harvey ‘s
contributions to the progress of medicine and the cohesion that he established
between descriptive observation and extrapolative theory are best documented by
Sir William Osler, who notes that after Harvey “no longer were men to rest
content with careful observation and with accurate description; no longer were
men to be content with finely spun theories and dreams, which ‘serve as a common
subterfuge of ignorance’; but here for the first time a great physiological
problem was approached from the experimental side by a man with a modern
scientific mind, who could weigh evidence and not go beyond it, and who had the
sense to let the conclusions emerge naturally but firmly from the observations."
As is evident, Harvey was the essential bridge between Aristotle and Descartes,
between the ancient and modern worlds, whose re-evaluation of ancient techniques
and their refinement marked a waypoint on the path of advancement, beyond which
medical discoveries and technologies accelerated with never-before-seen
swiftness. And to think that one of Harvey’s contemporaries wrote that "'twas
believed by the vulgar that he was crack-brained, and all the physicians were
against him"! The Galenic physicians, who elevated authority above objectivity,
are long dead and forgotten. So are the grimy, jeering mobs that mocked Harvey
in slum taverns and to whom Harvey rightly paid no heed. Harvey, an illustrious
example of a man who deemed his own cognition an adequate means of comprehending
reality, not needing the sanction of a committee of witch doctors and orthodox
medievalists, remains a prominent name in the field of medicine, as his
discoveries are not mere temporary paradigms, but rather eternal truths that
will be just as valid in the twenty-second century as they had been in the
seventeenth.
Harvey was one of the forebears of rational,
absolute, Western medicine. Can we today preserve his legacy in a sea of
statism, subjectivism, and collective delusion?
Sources Used:
Gregory, Andrew. “William Harvey’s Reception.” Available December
20, 2002: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/sts/gregory/215/handouts/h04_wh2.doc
J. Johnson, W. Hepburn, J. Crawford. “William Harvey.” Available
December 20, 2002: http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/Museum/harvey.html.
Landry,
Peter. “William Harvey (1578-1657).” Available December 21, 2002: http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Science/Harvey.htm.
Wiegand,
Susan. “William Harvey (1578-1657).” Available December 20, 2002: http://www.accessexcellence.org/AB/BC/William_Harvey.html
—(04/27/05)
Mr. Stolyarov is a science fiction novelist, independent philosophical essayist, poet, amateur mathematician, composer, contributor to Enter Stage Right and SoloHQ, writer for Objective Medicine, and Editor-in-Chief of The Rational Argumentator, a magazine championing the Western principles of reason, rights, and progress [http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/masterindex.html].
Mr. Stolyarov is also the recipient of the February 2004 Editor's Choice Award for Outstanding Achievement in Poetry, presented by poetry.com and the International Library of Poets.
He can be contacted at gennadystolyarovii@yahoo.com.
You can learn about Mr. Stolyarov’s newest science fiction novel, Eden against the Colossus, at http://www.geocities.com/rational_argumentator/eac.html."
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