READING LIST 459 



MlTTEILUNGEN ZUR GESCHICHTE DER MEDIZIN UND NATURWISSENSCHAF- 



ten, founded 1901. 



Studien zur Geschichte der Medizin, Edited by Karl Sudhoff. Very 

 important additions to the early history of anatomy, including the Ms. 

 sources as well as the earliest printed pictures of anatomy. 



Surgeon General's Library. The Catalogue should be consulted for 

 its many biographical references to biologists. The Library is es- 

 pecially rich in historical documents, as old anatomies, physiologies, 

 zoologies, etc. 



Evolution. The bibliography of Evolution is given, below under the 

 chapters dealing with the evolution theory. 



II. SPECIAL REFERENCES 



CHAPTER I 



Ancient biological Science: Carus; Botany after 1530, Sachs. Aris- 

 totle: Cuvier, a panegyric; Lewes, Aristotle — A Chapter from the History 

 of Science, 1864, a critical study; Huxley, On some Mistakes Attributed 

 to Aristotle; Macgilivray; Aristotle's History of Animals translated in 

 Bohn's Classical Library, 1887. Pliny: Magilivray; Thorndike, The 

 Place of Magic in the Intellectual History of Europe, 1905, chap. III. The 

 Renaissance: Symonds. Epochs in Biological History: Geddes (see 

 General List). 



CHAPTER II 



Vesalius: Roth, Andreas Vesalius Bruxellensis, the edition of 1892, 

 the standard source of knowledge of Vesalius and his times, contains bibli- 

 ography, references to his different portraits, the resurrection bone, etc., etc.; ' 

 Foster (see General List), Lecture I, excellent; Richardson in Disciples of 

 .^Esculapius, vol. I, contains pictures, his signature, etc.; Pettigrew; White, 

 vol. II, pp. 51-55; The Practitioner, 1896, vol. 56; The Asclepiad, 1885, 

 vol. II; De Humani Corporis Fabrica, editions of 1543 and 1555; Opera 

 Omnia, edited by Boerhaave, 2 vols., 1725; Anatomical Illustration before 

 Vesalius, Locy, Journ. Morphology, 191 1. Galen: Pettigrew; Huxley in 

 his essay on William Harvey. 



CHAPTER III 



Harvey: Foster, Lecture II, with quotations, excellent; Dalton, History 

 of the Circulation; Huxley, William Harvey, a critical essay) Hal 

 Works translated by Willis, with biography, Sydenham Society, 1847; Life 



