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An anatomical disquisition on the motion of the heart & blood in animals

Chapter 35: APPENDIX
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About This Book

The treatise presents systematic anatomical observations and experiments showing that blood moves in a closed circuit propelled by the heart’s rhythmic contractions, distinguishing pulmonary and systemic pathways. It challenges prevailing theories that blood is consumed or passes through invisible cardiac pores, and supports its conclusions with dissections, animal experiments, and measurements that estimate cardiac output. Emphasizing direct observation and quantitative reasoning over received authority, the work outlines methods, results, and logical arguments that establish the heart as the organ responsible for maintaining continuous circulation.

APPENDIX

THE ANATOMICAL EXAMINATION

OF THE BODY OF

THOMAS PARR

WHO DIED AT THE AGE OF ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY-TWO YEARS

MADE BY

WILLIAM HARVEY

OTHERS OF THE KING’S PHYSICIANS BEING PRESENT

ON THE 16TH OF NOVEMBER, THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BIRTHDAY OF HER SERENE HIGHNESS HENRIETTA MARIA, QUEEN OF GREAT BRITAIN, FRANCE AND IRELAND

[This account first appeared in the work of Dr. Betts, entitled: “De Ortu et Natura Sanguinis,” 8vo, London, 1669, the MS. having been presented to Betts by Mr. Michael Harvey, nephew of the author, with whom Betts was on terms of intimacy.]