The Knife Man: Blood, Body Snatching, and the Birth of Modern Surgery by Wendy Moore
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This was an interesting book, if a bit dry and lacking in illustration. Hunter's controversy-bedecked life is an interesting one. He was both admirably correct and terribly wrong on many counts, but relied on his own observations and testing and not on prevailing opinion. His minute studies of anatomy (thanks to wholesale body-snatching and a ruinous collecting of animals) led him to the conclusion that life on earth evolves. His study of fossils eroded away any idea that one forty day flood was responsible for the amount of life contained within. His written work on this idea of the development of life was never published because a fellow scientist suggested he amend "thousands of centuries" to "thousands of years" because it might incite the rabble in those revolutionary times.
His conservative methods were rejected by other surgeons, he died in debt, his brother-in-law published Hunter's work as his own and then burned the papers, but his legacy lived on through his museum and his students.
He was not a pleasant man, but he was driven to understand and to share his knowledge, even if what he knew tomorrow was different from what he knew yesterday. He was not so hidebound that he could not correct even his own conclusions. A lesson for all of us.
Note: my copy had a different cover. I wish I'd had one with his portrait, so minutely described by the author but conspicuous by its absence in the book.
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