William Harvey is the riveting story of a seventeenth-century man of medicine and the scientific revolution he sparked with his amazing discoveries about blood circulation within the body. Jole Shackelford traces Harvey's life from his early days in Folkstone, England, to his study of medicine in Padua through his rise to court physician to King James I and King Charles I, where he had the opportunity to conduct his research in human biology and physiology. Harvey's lecture notes show that he believed in the role of the heart in circulation of blood through a closed system as early as 1615. Yet he waited 13 years, until 1628, to publish his findings, when he felt more secure at introducing a concept counter to beliefs that had been held for hundreds of years. A revealing look at the changing social, religious, and political beliefs of the time, William Harvey documents how one man's originality helped introduce a new way of conducting scientific experiments that we still use today. Oxford Portraits in Science is an on-going series of scientific biographies for young adults. Written by top scholars and writers, each biography examines the personality of its subject as well as the thought process leading to his or her discoveries. These illustrated biographies combine accessible technical information with compelling personal stories to portray the scientists whose work has shaped our understanding of the natural world.
This sturdy, hardcover book is 140 pages long, and generously illustrated with some 37 black and white pictures, quarter page, half page, and full page. This is not a kid's book. It is suitable for the older teenager and for adults. We learn about the social milieu existing at the time of William Harvey. We learn about Harvey's education, his teachers, the works of other physiologists, and we learn about his detractors. While the book does disclose elements of the physiology and anatomy of the circulatory system, if your goal is to learn these things, it is best to look elsewhere. I recommend the following: If you want to learn about the physiology of the heart, you should use the internet, and go to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)), and view their narrated motion pictures of the pulmonary circulation, and of the electrical impulses from the SA node and AV node. Once you have consulted this cartoon at the NIH web site, you should have an easier time with Jole Shackelford's book. Most interesting, is the book's disclosure of earlier (incorrect and largely speculative) thoughts about heart physiology, which were replaced by William Harvey's correct thoughts. Here are some examples: CIRCULATORY SYSTEM. Galen of Pergamon thought that venous blood and arterial blood were totally separate and never mixed. Harvey discovered that they were the same blood, and that there was only one circulatory system. Ancient Greeks thought that the heart provided heat to the blood. Ancient Greeks thought that the liver provided blood with nutrients, and the purpose of veins was to come out of the liver, and deliver nutrients throughout the body. They also thought that the purpose of the lungs was to cool down the blood, in case the heart made it too hot (p. 46). Harvey based his argument on the circulatory system on this type of calculation: The amount of blood coming out the heart in one hour is ten times the volume of the entire body (p. 62), and that no amount of metabolism could possibly be consuming this amount of blood. Therefore, there must be a means to re-circulate the blood. WHY DOES BLOOD FLOW TO THE HEART. Galen thought that blood was naturally attracted to the heart, just like objects naturally fall because of gravity. But Harvey showed that blood flowed to the heart, because the heart pumped it around in a circuit. THE HEART HEATS THE BLOOD. Descartes, a contemporary of Harvey, thought that the heart heated the blood to the point that it vaporized, and that in coming back to the heart through the veins, the blood condensed in the veins (p. 108). The book points out that Descartes' view was a hybrid of William Harvey's view and the view of the ancient Greeks. PULMONARY CIRCULATION. Michael Servetus discovered pulmonary circulation, but there were only 3 copies of his manuscript, and so William Harvey re-discovered the pulmonary circulation, and thus Harvey receiv
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