Anatomy, a field in the
biological sciences concerned with the identification and description of the
body structures of living things. Gross anatomy involves the study of major
body structures by dissection and observation and in its narrowest sense is
concerned only with the human body. “Gross anatomy” customarily refers to the
study of those body structures large enough to be examined without the help of
magnifying devices, while microscopic anatomy is concerned with the study of structural
units small enough to be seen only with a light microscope. Dissection is basic
to all anatomical research. The earliest record of its use was made by the
Greeks, and Theophrastus called dissection “anatomy,” from ana temnein, meaning
“to cut up.” Comparative anatomy, the other major subdivision of the field,
compares similar body structures in different species of animals in order to
understand the adaptive changes they have undergone in the course of evolution.
Gross Anatomy
This ancient discipline reached
its culmination between 1500 and 1850, by which time its subject matter was
firmly established. None of the world’s oldest civilizations dissected a human
body, which most people regarded with superstitious awe and associated with the
spirit of the departed soul. Beliefs in life after death and a disquieting
uncertainty concerning the possibility of bodily resurrection further inhibited
systematic study. Nevertheless, knowledge of the body was acquired by treating
wounds, aiding in childbirth, and setting broken limbs. The field remained
speculative rather than descriptive, though, until the achievements of the
Alexandrian medical school and its foremost figure, Herophilus (flourished 300
BCE), who dissected human cadavers and thus gave anatomy a considerable factual
basis for the first time. Herophilus made many important discoveries and was
followed by his younger contemporary Erasistratus, who is sometimes regarded as
the founder of physiology. In the 2nd century CE, Greek physician Galen
assembled and arranged all the discoveries of the Greek anatomists, including
with them his own concepts of physiology and his discoveries in experimental
medicine. The many books Galen wrote became the unquestioned authority for
anatomy and medicine in Europe because they were the only ancient Greek
anatomical texts that survived the Dark Ages in the form of Arabic (and then
Latin) translations.
Owing to church prohibitions
against dissection, European medicine in the Middle Ages relied upon Galen’s
mixture of fact and fancy rather than on direct observation for its anatomical
knowledge, though some dissections were authorized for teaching purposes. In
the early 16th century, the artist Leonardo da Vinci undertook his own
dissections, and his beautiful and accurate anatomical drawings cleared the way
for Flemish physician Andreas Vesalius to “restore” the science of anatomy with
his monumental De humani corporis fabrica libri septem (1543; “The Seven Books
on the Structure of the Human Body”), which was the first comprehensive and
illustrated textbook of anatomy. As a professor at the University of Padua,
Vesalius encouraged younger scientists to accept traditional anatomy only after
verifying it themselves, and this more critical and questioning attitude broke
Galen’s authority and placed anatomy on a firm foundation of observed fact and
demonstration.
From Vesalius’s exact
descriptions of the skeleton, muscles, blood vessels, nervous system, and
digestive tract, his successors in Padua progressed to studies of the digestive
glands and the urinary and reproductive systems. Hieronymus Fabricius,
Gabriello Fallopius, and Bartolomeo Eustachio were among the most important
Italian anatomists, and their detailed studies led to fundamental progress in
the related field of physiology. William Harvey’s discovery of the circulation
of the blood, for instance, was based partly on Fabricius’s detailed
descriptions of the venous valves.
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