Walker Astral Body
Walker Astral Body
Walker Astral Body
Author(s): D. P. Walker
Source: Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Vol. 21, No. 1/2 (Jan. - Jun.,
1958), pp. 119-133
Published by: The Warburg Institute
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/750490
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE
By D. P. Walker
BookMedicinae,
IV of 1542,1
Jeanis Fernel's
entitled "OnPhysiologia,
Spirits and Innate first
Heat" ;2 published
its second in his De Naturali Parte
chapter contains the following passage :3
In order that the necessity and the substance of the spirit may be more fully shown, we
must revisit and recall the doctrines of the ancient philosophers. The Academics4 were
the first to suppose, when they realized that two entirely dissimilar natures cannot be
associated together without the interposition of a suitable mean, that our soul, created
by the supreme maker of all things, before its emanation and immigration into this thick
and solid body, put on as a simple garment a certain shining, pure body like a star, which,
being immortal and eternal, could never be detached nor torn away from the soul, and
without which the soul could not become an inhabitant of this world. Then they sur-
rounded the soul with another body, also fine and simple, but less pure, less shining and
splendid than the first, not created by the supreme maker, but compounded of a mixture
of the finer elements, whence it is named aerial and aethereal. Clothed with these two
bodies the soul, entering this frail and mortal body, or rather thrown like an exile into
a loathsome and shadowy prison, becomes a guest of the earth until, having broken from
this prison and having returned, joyful and free, to its home, it is made a fellow-citizen
of the gods.
The occurrence here of this account of the Neoplatonic astral body, the
star-like vehicle or garment (x L, rv) of the soul,5 is at first sight most
surprising. The theory of the astral body was, as we shall see, not generally
considered safe or respectable, whereas Fernel's work was a careful and
systematic medical treatise, which maintained its position as a standard
reference- and text-book for a century. Fernel is quite widely known nowa-
days through Sir Charles Sherrington's admirable monograph, The Endeavour
of Jean Fernel,6 and through his Gifford Lectures, Man on his Nature.7 Although
I For a bibliography of Fernel's writings see superiore: non ab summo id opifice pro-
Sir Charles Sherrington, The Endeavour of Jean creatum, verim, elementorum praesertimque
Fernel, Cambridge, 1946, pp. 187 f. tenuiorum permistione concretum, a quibus
2 "De Spiritibus & Innato Calido"; I shall nomen inveniens aereum & aethereum appel-
quote from lo. Fernelii Ambiani, Medicina, latur. Duobus hisce corporibus jam stipatus
Paris, Andr6 Wechel, I554. animus, in tertium hoc mortale caducumque
3 Fernel, Medicina, 1554, P. 1o04: "Qu corpus, seu potiiis in tetrum & tenebricosum
autem spiritus necessitas atque substantia carcerem tanquam exul dejectus, terrarum fit
pleniiis demonstretur, repetenda sunt & re- hospes, donec effracto carcere alacer & liber
plicanda veterum philosophorum decreta: in patriam reversus, municeps fiat & civis
quorum primi Academici cuhm perspicerent deorum."
fieri non posse ut naturae quammaxime dis- 4 I.e. the Neoplatonists.
pares, nullius idonei medij interjectu socie- 5 On the astral body see: G. Verbeke,
tatem inirent coirentque, animum nostrum ' L' Evolution de la Doctrine du Pneuma du Stoicisme
summo rerum opifice conditum, priusquam c S. Augustin, Paris, 1945, pp. 267, 306 fT.,
emanaret immigraretque denso huic & con- 368 ff., 374; Proclus, The Elements of Theology,
creto corpori, censuerunt corpore quodam ed. E. R. Dodds, Oxford, 1933) P- 313,
illustri, puro & astro simili tanquam simplici App. II "The Astral Body in Neoplatonism";
veste indui: quod immortale & sempiternum Ralph Cudworth, The True Intellectual System
nunquam ab animo absolvi divellique posset, of the Universe, 2nd ed., London, I743, II,
& sine quo non fieret hujus mundi incola. 78 i f.
Ab hoc deinde alterum corpus animo circum- 6 Vide supra note I.
jecerunt, tenue illud quidem ac simplex, sed 7 2nd ed., Cambridge, i951.
tamen impurius, minus illustre & splendidum
I19
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120 D. P. WALKER
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 121
Galen, writing on the soul of man, says that these spirits either are the soul, or are its
immediate instrument. This is certainly true, and their light surpasses that of the sun
and all the stars; and, what is still more marvellous, in pious men the divine spirit itself
mixes itself with these same spirits, and by its divine light makes them shine more brightly,
so that their knowledge of God may be clearer, their ascent to Him more resolute, and
their feelings towards Him more ardent.
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122 D. P. WALKER
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 123
with the soul, constitute the three main sources of the astral body
brings them all together in one of the places where he' discusses the
the soul :18
If we are to declare the substance of the soul, we must say one of two things: eith
it is the shining and aethereal body, at which conclusion the Stoics and Arist
logically arrive, even if unwillingly; or that it is an incorporeal substance, and
body is its first vehicle, through which mean the soul receives communion w
bodies.
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124 D. P. WALKER
biani de Abditis rerum Causis Libri Duo Denuo ab 27 Sherrington, Endeavour of Jean Fernel,
ipso authore recogniti, compluribusque in locis aucti, pp. 22, 33-4, 52.
ad Henricum Franciae Regem Christianissimum. 28 E.g. Fernel, Medicina, 1554, P. 0o3 (refer-
Aeditio Secunda, Paris, I551. ence to Ist Dialogue of De abd. r. c., on innate
26 Ibid., p. 70: "Quae Deus olim proprijs heat not being elemental) ; cf. references given
operibus inchoavit, eadem nunc quasi feriatus by Sherrington, Endeavour, pp. 22, 174-5, and
coelo tanquam administro continuanda cre-Fernel, ibid., Praefatio (in a list of what a
didit. Et quaecunque naturae legibus existerephysician must know, "coelorum & syderum
dicimus, eadem primum processerunt ' Deo: conversiones, & que inde fluunt dimanantque
qui certe nunc admodum pauca proximO, necvirtutes orbis inferioris moderatrices ob-
coelo, nec natura, nec semine interveniente servat"), pp. 227-9 (celestial nature of human
ingenerat, sed conditis naturae legibus omnia semen and spirit).
per coelum administrat."
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 125
Causis. He believed, as we have seen, that all occurrences in the
are governed by celestial influences; the heavens contain the
things and transmit them by means of cosmic spirit (spiritus
terrestrial world. Although the forms of the four elements de
from the heavens, their action is contrasted against that of this c
the fifth essence. In any object the elements act in a constant
is wholly predictable from an analysis into the elemental quali
cold, wet). But, over and above their elemental constitution,
ment, all things have a spirit which derives directly or indire
stars and is continually conditioned by them. In animals this
cause of generation and growth, of sensation and movemen
distinguishes a live from a dead body. It is what gives the an
form," that is to say, what makes it an organic whole and
agglomeration of parts.29 This spirit, which bears the vital or
present in the semen of the parents owing to some huge heave
which impressed it there ;30 it is thence transmitted to the proge
is also continually increased and influenced by celestial warm
said: "Sol et homo generant hominem."31 Infectious diseases ar
of the animal's spirit by a morbid condition of the air, also cau
influences.
It is now, I think, evident why Fernel mentions the astral body favourably
when he is discussing medical spirits. He probably did not accept the theory
wholly or literally, but would have regarded it, like any other part of the
prisca theologia, as a mythical, "fabulous," presentation of a philosophical
truth, namely, that the human spirit (like all other spirits) is produced and
conditioned astrologically.32
There now arises the further question: why did Fernel want this to be
true? The main reason, as for many of his contemporaries, was, I think this:
the supposition of astrological spirits extends the area of possible rational
explanation to such things as procreation, embryology, infectious diseases,
psychological disorders, which cannot be adequately explained by elemental
causes, and would therefore, if no celestial causes were assumed, have to be
incomprehensibly divine. The motive for making this assumption is perhaps
to some degree metaphysical in the modern, pejorative sense. It is noticeable
that Fernel seldom attempts to give any precise correlation between the posi-
tions and movements of the heavenly bodies and their effects in the terrestrial
29 This is a very compressed summary ofamong many sources of this astrological con-
the whole of the first Book of the De abd. r. c.,ception of spirits, which appears in mediaeval
in which Fernel propounds and defends hismedical authors, in Avicenna (De viribus
views in great detail. The passionate dis- cordis, Libri in re medica omnes, 1564, p. 325)
believer in astrological causes, Brutus, is for example, and has connexions with
dramatically converted on p. 56. mediaeval alchemy and magic.
30 Fernel, De abd. r. c., pp. 60-61 ; Aristotle, Fernel accepts the usual assumptions of the
prisca theologia: that Plato learnt the Mosaic
Problems, X, xiii (892A): ":~jv O &pZx7 y'vEaYv
TV re v y vi aOCL 810 rCq VerCpoiCq xaC EtLaOCXL- doctrine from the Egyptians, and that the
vwicgS ro os x60pLOu xaTt 7or av'rgB 0U67O p Sy&2c." Neoplatonists learnt to interpret Plato cor-
31 Fernel, ibid., p. 54; Aristotle, Physics, II, rectly from St. John, St. Paul and Dionysius
194 B 13: "&vOpcO~oTs &vOpcOov y~vv XOcL x JLO." the Areopagite (De abd. r. c., pp. 3, 68).
32 The astral body is of course only one
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126 D. P. WALKER
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 127
very tangled up, especially in his embryology, where of his two non-
formative principles, both of them celestial and divine, one or oth
superfluous. Up till the fourth month the spirit shapes the foetu
formative principle; then, when heart and brain are complete, th
instantaneously injected and this becomes the body's total form.
moment of injection the soul is purely rational (is pure mens), b
becomes one with the lower, vegetative and sentient, souls, which wer
present in the spirit.38
It seems impossible to make a coherent system out of Fernel's
with spirit and soul; it is not therefore surprising that his immediate
criticized this aspect of his medical philosophy rather sharply, an
often cited as representative of those who abused the concept of s
used it, as Harvey says, as a deus ex machind to resolve any difficult
These criticisms are directed with especial vehemence against Fer
logical spirit, against his assertion that the spirit, or the innate h
celestial, aethereal; and in this connexion his use of the astral bo
often attacked as well.40
In his De Somno et Vigilia41 Joannes Argenterius, a self-consciously anti-
Galenic and somewhat revolutionary medical writer, who denied the existence
of animal spirits and kept only the vital, refers several times with contempt
to Fernel's astral bodies; "for who," he asks, "could believe, let alone prove,
that the soul is wrapped up in these garments and spirits?"42 He thinks that
Fernel and his followers have been misled by "some Neoplatonists or other"43
into recounting these fables and he implies that there are no genuine ancient
authorities for the astral body. It is a pity, since they, like Argenterius himself,
31 Fernel, De abd. r. c., pp. 31 ff. (presence 39 William Harvey, Opera Omnia: a Collegio
Medicorum Londiniensi edita, London, 1766,
of spirit necessary to prepare foetus for recep-
tion of total form), 39 iff (semen containspp. 115-I6 (Exercitatio Altera ad J. Riolanum,
1649): "Vulgo enim scioli, cum causas
spirit, but not soul), 55-6 (summary: "Itaque
assignare haud norunt, dicunt statim a
cium multiplex illa sit & varia corporis prae-
paratio, tum ex quatuor illis rerum initijsspiritibus hoc fieri; et omnium opifices spiritus
haudquaquam corruptis, minutissime & ex introducunt; et, ut mali poetae, ad fabulae ex-
toto inter se confusis reddita temperatio, tumrn
plicationem
advocant in et catastrophen, O86v &7br69 tXcvkq,
scenam."
concinna corporis conformatio, & partium
apta secum coniunctio, tum ver6 ingeniti40 The astral body also appears in Fernel's
spiritus omnis commoderatio: totus hic De abd. r. c.: pp. 95 (discussion of Galen on
potentiarum ordo, a facultate, & vi seminis,the soul-passage quoted above, note I8), 10o7.
& ab eo qui semen iecit dependet. Ubi verb 41 Argenterius, De Somno et Vigilia Libri Duo,
iam omnis ad plenum absoluta est praepara-in quibus continentur duae tractationes de calido
tio, quo tempore consummatam potentiam nativo, et de spiritibus, Florence, 1556.
dicimus, tum extrinsecus accedit ipsa species, 42 Argenterius, De Somn. et Vig., p. 303:
naturali quadam & quasi dicas inevitabili "Quis enim potest non dicam probare, sed
necessitate"), 58 ff. and passim (spirit is notcredere animum involvi his vestibus, &
elemental, but celestial), 71 (even the mensspiritibus?"
appears to come from the spiritus mundi), 95, 43 Ibid.: "Alij verb qui dicunt, spiritum
1o3 (soul is incorporeal; only rational soul isquendam esse divinum, immortalem, alium
immortal); Medicina, 227-8 (natural and verb ex tenuiorum elementorum mistione con-
sentient soul are in the spirit of the semen),cretum, excusationem merentur, qu6d quum
229 (but the rational soul comes extrinsically), fabulosa quaedam se referre agnoscerent,
247-8 (at the fourth month, "quo tempore nescio quos academicos hujus opinionis
cor & cerebrum consummata jam sunt"). authores faciunt."
3s Fernel, Medicina, pp. i 6o- I.
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128 D. P. WALKER
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 129
George of Trebizond and connected it with Aristotle's spirit in t
analogous to the element of the stars.50 With some hesitations, R
willing to grant the celestial nature of the spirit.5'
This was not usual for ordinary, non-Paracelsan, medical write
main objection (I think a valid one) brought by Argenterius,
Cureus and others, against Fernel's theory of the celestial spirit is
not self-consistent.53 The Aristotelian celestial quintessence is inal
incorruptible; it cannot therefore be made the substance of med
which, on Fernel's own showing, are nourished by blood and
elemental) and in are a constant process of dissipation and replenishm
Aristotle said "analogous to the element of the stars," he meant "a
and not identical.54
Joachim Cureus, a very conservative Aristotelian of the Paduan school, in
his Libellus Physicus of 1572, not only points out this inconsistency in Fernel's
theory, but also its dangers: Fernel's wrong interpretation of the Aristotle
passage and
these hyperboles about aethereal heat and spirit and their like give opportunity to
insolent and windy minds to deviate rashly from the doctrine of the ancients, and, as it
were, seditiously to overthrow all the arts.55
The insolent and windy minds are almost certainly the Paracelsans, whom he
50 Jean Riolan, Opera Omnia, Paris, I6I0o, vis conformatrix insidet, Sol impertit").
p. 35 (Commentarius de spiritu et calido innato): 62 Paracelsan medicine, with which I am
"Quae cum Argenterius scribit a Fernelio not competent to deal, is of course full of
temere conficta, satis ostendit quam fiuerit celestial spirits; the Paracelsan and the
versatus in doctrina Platonicorum, apud quos Fernelian traditions connect at one point at
vix quidquam occurrit frequentius: Bessario least, in Jacques Gohory, an enthusiastic
contra Trapezuntium contendit eandem fer6 promulgator of Paracelsan theories and a
mentem Aristotelis, quando scribit . . ." friend of Fernel, with whom he discussed
(follows the passage quoted above, note I7). them. See Walker, Sp. and Dem. Mag., Ch. IV
51 Ibid., p. 34 (after giving Fernel's views (i).
on the astral body, and quoting the Aristotle 63 Argenterius, De Somn. et Vig., p. 275;
and Galen passages (v. supra, notes 17 and 18), for Bertacchi v. supra, note 49; Cureus,
Riolan concludes: "Sit ergo spiritus, corpus 7eptC aOae-eS, xxat laloarov Libellus Physicus,
aethereum, caloris ac facultatum sedes ac continens doctrinam de natura, & differentijs
vinculum, primumque obeundae functionis colorum, sonorum, odorum, Witebergae, 1572,
instrumentum"), 38-9 (after admitting the p. 262; cf. Jacques Aubert, Progymnasmata, In
usual objections to a celestial spirit or innate Joan. Fernelii Med. Librum de Abditis Rerum
heat, he remembers that the sun produces Naturalium et Medicamentorum causis, Basle,
spontaneously generated worms, etc.; surely 1579, PP. 29-30.
man is more noble than worms? "Equidem "* Cureus, Lib. Ph., pp. 264-5: "Non fuit
certe desino mirari si quaestione diligenter ita incogitans Aristoteles, ut aeterna & incor-
subducta & examinata, Fernelius cum Aris- ruptibilia misceret cum caducis & corrupti-
totele opificem calorem origine coelestem bilibus, sed facit collationem ex analogia,
asserere maluerit qua'm cum vulgo elemen- sicut manifeste ostendunt verba."
tarem. Sit tamen de problematica quaestione 55 Cureus, Lib. Ph., p. 264: "has hyperboles
liberum cuiquejudicium, quia eadem manent de calore & spiritu aethereo & similes,
medendi praecepta utrumvis deffendatur."), praebere occasionem ingenijs petulantibus &
127 (after several criticisms of Fernel's ventosis, ut temere a doctrina veterum
embryology, Riolan nevertheless accepts: discedant, & quasi concitata seditione omnes
"genitorem spiritum, cui, ut primo subjecto artes conturbent."
9*
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130 D. P. WALKER
castigates in his preface.56 Cureu
embryology just mentioned (the d
since the heavenly bodies are exempt from
you will have to imagine that the hea
miracle, as St. Thomas wished for the s
bodies, the soul and the innate heat; wh
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 13x
Though Harvey apparently rejected spirits, celestial or otherwise, he w
by no means free of them. For, by the time we have finished reading t
De Generatione Animalium, we realize that something very odd has happen
The spirits are indeed gone; but blood has not only taken their place, it
also taken over all their functions, including sensation,62 and has acquir
their divine and celestial nature. It has even adopted their terminology wh
sale; the following passage might come out of Fernel or Ficino, if one sub
tuted "spirit" for "blood":
Indeed it is blood in which the vegetative and sensitive activities first shine forth;
which heat, the primary and immediate instrument of the soul, is born; which is t
common bond (vinculum) of body and soul; and by which, as a vehicle, the soul influence
all parts of the body.63
It is blood, not spirit, which now fashions the embryo, beginning with th
tiny red, jumping speck (punctum saliens), which is the first sign of life
fertile egg. The familiar Aristotelian text, so beloved of Fernel, is applied
Harvey to the blood, which now contains "a nature analogous to the eleme
of the stars."64 It is blood that should properly be called spirit, which is trul
celestial and indeed supernatural, which forms and governs the whole bod
"not otherwise indeed than the stars above, especially the sun and mo
keeping their eternal circuits, vivify the lower world."65 The heart is "
Sun of the microcosm."66
Fernel's error then, according to Harvey, lay, not in postulating supra-
elemental, celestial powers in all living organisms, but in ascribing them to
fictitious spirit, instead of to the obvious, visible substance, blood.67
Deosve in scenam advocare, philosophiamque
62 Harvey, De Gen. An., OP. Omn., p. 397,
532 ("Habet [sc. sanguis] profecto in se
fictis opinionibus onerare: domi scilicet
nascitur, quod vulgo ab astris petimus . . .
animam primo ac principaliter, non vege-
tativam modo, sed sensitivam etiam et moti-
apud medicos tot sunt spiritus, quot partes
vam..."). corporis praecipuae, aut operationes; nempe
63 Harvey, De Gen. An., Op. Omn., animales,
p. 398: vitales, naturales, visivi, auditorii,
"Certe sanguis est, in quo vegetativae et generativi, implantati, influentes,
concoctivi,
sensitivae operationes primo elucent: cui et caeteri. Sanguis autem, pars corporis
calor, primarium et immediatum animae primogenita et principalis, virtutibus hisce
instrumentum, innascitur: qui corporis ani- omnibus dotatus, agendique postestate prae
maeque commune vinculum est: et quo caeteris praeditus est; ideoque xocr' &~oxlv
vehiculo anima omnibus totius corporis spiritus nomen meretur"; p. 529: "Sanguis
partibus influit." itaque est spiritus, ob eximias ejus virtutes et
64 For Aristotle v. supra, note 17; Harvey, vires; est etiam coelestis; siquidem in illo
ibid., pp. 397 ("in genitura ac sanguine spiritu hospitatur natura, nempe anima,
reperiri divinum quid, respondens elemento respondens elemento stellarum; id est, ali-
stellarum"), 527, 531. quid coelo analogum, coeli instrumentum,
65 Harvey, ibid., p. 532:"... dum nempe coelique vicarium." Cf. Walter Pagel,
perpetim universum corpus peragrat [sc. "William Harvey and the Purpose of Circu-
sanguis], partesque omnes, quas ipsemet lation," Isis, XLII, 1951.
fabricat sibique adjungit, nutrit, fovet, ac in 66 Harvey, Exercitatio Anatomica de motu
vivis sustentat: non aliter certe quam cordis et sanguinis in animalibus, 1628, Op. Omn.,
superiora astra, sol praesertim et luna, ser- p. 49: "Ita cor principium vitae et sol micro-
vatis perpetuo circuitibus, inferiora ista cosmi . . . toti corpori praestat lar iste fami-
vivificant."; pp. 523-4: "Non est opus pro- liaris, fundamentum vitae, auctor omnium";
fecto spiritum aliquem a sanguine distinctum De Gen. an., Op. Omn., p. 531.
quaerere, aut calorem aliunde introducere, 67 cf. passage quoted above, note 58.
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132 D. P. WALKER
This wholesale transference of n
spirit to the blood does achieve the
produces a new crop of confusion
caused, oddly enough, by Harvey'
physiology it leads to two obviou
against the traditional theory that
blood is due to the presence in the
breathed air; that arterial blood c
vaporous substance, can be expe
under water-no bubbles arise.6" H
vaguely, by the vivifying effect of
for Harvey, no connexion between
blood and respiration, whereas fo
there was. Secondly, the nervous sy
Harvey avoids by never mentioni
all the functions of animal spirits,
and motor-activity are linked wit
the fact, which also Harvey sure
contain blood.7'
In his theory of generation Harvey is obliged to extend the powers of bloo
to semen and even to the egg (in the De Generatione Animalium he deals chief
with chickens), since there is evidently some process of development going on
before the first appearance of the speck of blood; semen, as well as bloo
contains "a nature analogous to the element of the stars."72 Moreover th
nature has more mysterious powers than were ever ascribed to celestial spirit
Harvey was convinced that semen did not penetrate to the uterus; this he
proved empirically, to his own satisfaction, by dissecting the recently fertili
wombs of deer and hens, and by experiments in which he failed to blow
through the vagina of a hen.73 He offers several tentative explanations of
fact that nevertheless conception does not occur without fertilization: perhap
the whole body of the hen is rendered fertile by the semen;4" perhaps it
at a distance like a magnet, or like a star;75 or perhaps its action is like t
of a contagious disease.76 But the explanation which he evidently prefer
though he is very shy in presenting it, is as follows. The interior of a wo
68 Harvey, Exerc. alt., Op. Omn., p. of
12o;
London, I886, p. 94), it appears that he
Harvey does sometimes say that arterial
thought that nervous transmission was analo-
blood is more spirituous than venous; but heto that of light.
gous
denies that spirits are anything more than 72aHarvey, De Gen. An., Op. Omn., pp. 30o,
358
quality of living blood (i.e. blood within the(egg), 331 ("Neque enim gallus, per sim-
body, sanguis as opposed to cruor), or plicem
can geniturae emissionem, foecunditatem
exist separately from it (ibid., p. I 17). aliquam gallinae aut ovis ejus adfert; sed
69 Harvey, Exerc. An. de motu cordis,quatenus
Op. genitura isthaec prolifica est, et vi
Omn., p. 49. plastica imbuta; spiritosa nempe, effectiva,
et analoga elemento stellarum"), 397, 527-
70 Harvey does occasionally mention nerves
when expounding his adversaries' doctrine73 ofIbid., pp. 202-3, 325 f., 347, 361, 497 f.,
spirits (e.g. on Fernel, Op. Omn., p. I I6), but
592.
not when putting forward his own views. 74 Ibid., p. 325-
71 From lecture notes of Harvey, dated
75 Ibid., pp. 375, 592.
76 Ibid., pp. 373-4-
1616 (Prelectiones Anatomicae Universalis, ed.
Committee of the Royal College of Physicians
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THE ASTRAL BODY IN RENAISSANCE MEDICINE 133
ready for conception resembles a brain in appearance; we might
conjecture that their functions are similar. In the same way a
immaterial appetite or image is conceived in the brain by the stim
external object, and results in a corporeal action appropriate to, or
resembling, that object, so the male, the more perfect animal, p
coition an immaterial desire in the female's womb, which results in a
reproduction of the father.77
This is perhaps a genuine explanation in the sense that it explain
of which we are not directly aware (the conception of offspring) in t
process (the coming into being of a mental state) of which Harvey
thought we are directly conscious. But it is plainly not a scientific
in the modern sense of the term, because it removes the process to b
outside the realm of possible experiment, whereas Fernel's astrolog
of generation,78 in spite of its vagueness and confusion, might
tested empirically (e.g. by seeing whether the fertility of certain
animal corresponded with certain dispositions of the heavens)
course, would not have thought that science must be empirically
Harvey evidently did-indeed the necessity for his explanation of
arose only because of his careful, but misleading, experiments on
hens.
77 Harvey, De Gen. Anim., Op. Omn., pp. igitur et gallina vere potissimum
383 ("Gallus
594-5; cf. pp. 387-8. This theory may foecundi fiunt; tanquam sol, vel coelum, vel
ultimately derive from the Platonic concep-natura, vel anima mundi, vel Deus omni-
tion of the womb as a separately animated potens (nam eodem haec redeunt) iis causa
being, which was revived in medical circlessuperior ac divinior in generatione foret. Ita
in Rabelais' time. sol et homo [v. supra, note 31] (id est, sol per
hominem, ceu instrumentum) hominem
78 Harvey was by no means averse to astro-
generant. Eodemque modo, sator omnium
logical causes, of a simplified, sun-centred
kind; cf. De Gen. An., Op. Omn., pp. 380 et (the
gallus ovum generant, et ex ovo pullum:
cock is not perhaps the "causa efficiens accessu nempe et recessu solis perpetuo; qui
prima" of the fertile egg; "videtur enimex divini numinis voluntate vel fato gignendis
rerum omnium generatio coelitus originemrebus omnibus inservit"), 420.
ducere, atque solis lunaeque motum sequi");
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