Accompany Da Vinci's Super God Day
Chapter 16
A certain guy seemed to be watching behind them for a long time, but he never came over.
Before Heidi could ask Da Vinci why he came, he patted the carriage next to him and motioned her to follow him.
After the two got into the car, Da Vinci finally said, "I'll take you somewhere."
"...As for the rush?"
Heidi suddenly realized that something was wrong, what was this big ball of cloth under their feet?
She hadn't seen him for a long time, originally she just wanted to chat with him, maybe they could make some copper sulfate together for experimentation, who would have thought that she would be suddenly abducted into the carriage.
And it looked like he was going out of town.
The carriage made many twists and turns, and finally stopped not far from the suburbs.
Heidi lifted the curtain and suddenly stopped breathing for a few seconds.
"This is the cemetery."
"Yes." Da Vinci turned over and jumped out of the car neatly, and stretched out his hand towards her: "Get down."
She helped him out of the car, and found that there was not even a grave guard here.
"This is... a wild cemetery?"
"I found several unowned corpses, and they were not buried for a long time."
Da Vinci turned to look at her with a smile in his eyes.
"You are an alchemist, you should know how to dissect, right?"
"Wait—do you want to put the corpse—" Heidi suddenly felt a chill down her back.
"Let's quietly drag one back to be dissected—come here and give me a hand."
"Mr. Da Vinci! We can't—"
Heidi noticed that he even took out the shovel, and tried to stop this behavior: "Don't you think this is a bit too much?!"
"I asked the lord for instructions, and he even allocated a special place for me to dissect." Da Vinci looked at one cemetery after another as if he was picking goods, ready to shovel out the corpses at any time.
"By the way," he turned to look at her with a slightly curious expression, "Since we've known each other for so long, why don't you call me Leonardo?"
"Mr. Leonardo," Heidi took a deep breath, "Can we go back now?"
"No." Da Vinci said politely: "I need to confirm how to draw the human body through dissection."
He has wanted to do this for a long time.
What are ligaments, how do limbs stretch or stretch, and how are human muscles constructed——
There are not many people who can accompany him to do these strange things.
Not only must they trust each other, but they must not be stubborn believers. At the same time, it is best to give some practical advice.
The name Heidi Keithler is a perfect answer.
He obviously knew her character well, so he directly picked a relatively fresh tomb, and began to shovel and shovel for the coffin.
These days, Da Vinci has visited here several times.
Regular cemeteries have to pay a part of the management fee. Some poor families can no longer afford this kind of expenses, so they find such remote and desolate places to bury their relatives and friends. Some people even tie the cross with rough branches.
Heidi looked nervously at the figure, and said with a more serious tone: "What are you going to do after the autopsy? Throw it into the Arno River?
Da Vinci paused, and looked at her in surprise: "Of course it will be buried again?"
These are all weird ideas.
After a while, a crude coffin was exposed, which was almost broken by a shovel.
Da Vinci's eyes lit up, and after digging up the surrounding soil, he thought of a way to pry open the coffin.
The groom had already collected the silver coins, and at this time he also brought a body bag to help.
Heidi wondered how the lord would agree to such a request, and even thought of vomiting for a moment.
But it was also at this time that she felt like a witness to history.
Under the strict religious environment, anatomy is not something that can be made public, and it is even less likely to be approved by the public authority.
But the birth of modern science itself comes from the exploration of anatomy by these painters and sculptors.
Without them, gut and brain functions would not have been identified, let alone those drugs and treatments developed.
Forget it, it is considered a dedication to medicine.
The carriage bumped all the way back, and the two people in the carriage were thinking about the problem.
Da Vinci was thinking about where to cut the knife later, and Heidi was wondering if she would be hanged by the church.
"So, Leonardo, how did you convince the lord?"
"I said..." Da Vinci looked at her with a sly smile: "This is very useful in alchemy."
Actually-
Medici actually agreed! !
Heidi took a breath and subconsciously wanted to refute him, but she really couldn't speak.
Alchemy is the enlightenment of modern chemistry and medicine, and it is indeed possible to get involved with it by force.
The side door had already been opened, and servants came to help carry the body bag.
Heidi subconsciously followed them to the basement, and more absurd things occurred to her on the way.
100 years later, there is still a scientist who associates dissection with theater performances, and charges for tickets——
It is said that every time an anatomy is performed publicly, four or five hundred people will gather to watch the excitement, and the theater tickets are sold out.
Why were these people so weird hundreds of years ago? ?
The underground space is very cold and spacious, and the ventilation effect is also very good.
They divided a closed small hall to complete the experiment, and equipped with clear water and a high platform inside.
The servants put the body bag on the table and walked away as if nothing happened.
The two of them were left here, and the atmosphere was a bit weird.
Da Vinci knew Heidi had concerns, and he wasn't sure if she knew them at all.
——But this person can even create blue out of thin air, he seems to know a little bit about everything, can't he really know that?
He carefully removed the body bag, saluted, and studied the anatomy of the wrist and elbow.
Then I was dumbfounded.
Before I started, I felt that I basically knew everything, but when I really started, my mind was a mess.
After the skin was cut open, it was all yellow, and no muscles or bones could be seen.
Heidi waited for a long time before saying, "This is fat."
The other party looked up at her instantly, as if six words were written in his eyes - you really understand this!
She sighed, took out a newly made glove in her pocket, took a knife and began to explain the structure to him.
"It's called a tendon."
"See this? It's a muscle."
Da Vinci took out the notebook he carried with him and began to draw the internal structure here.
At this time, he moved the pen accurately and quickly without any hesitation.
Heidi is not very familiar with this, but she can't be regarded as a layman.
She has been involved in so many things.
Fundraising for the national debt, the design of airplanes, the innovation of frequency hopping in wireless communication technology -- and her own plastic surgery.
At that time, I was no longer young, and was once ridiculed by the media.
When the doctors were afraid to use the knife, she did her homework and went to see the doctor, pointing to her elbow and the back of her ear, and said, "From here on, help me with a skin lift, and I'll teach you how to do it."
later?
Later, many movie stars rushed to the hospital, pointed to the photos on the wall and said, "I want to do like her too! Just like Heidi!"
"Look at this." She picked up a piece of the white thing and explained, "This is a nerve."
"I have a question." Da Vinci studied the details of the fault, frowned and said, "I feel that the blood vessels... are different, and one is bright and the other is dark. Do you understand this?"
Heidi was a little surprised: "Don't you know the difference between veins and arteries?"
He was also quite surprised: "What is that?"
"What about the structure of the heart?"
"Have you ever seen a human heart?"
OK, got it.
This is the ignorant and uncivilized Middle Ages.
"The anatomy book I read said that blood vessels are all the same, there is no difference." Da Vinci looked closely at the different colors, and said seriously: "But I feel that there are many problems in that book."
"Isn't the church not allowing dissection now?" Heidi suddenly felt that she had grasped something important: "How did the dissection book come about?"
"They can dissect monkeys." Da Vinci didn't seem to feel any problem: "Is the structure of humans and monkeys different?"
Heidi took a deep breath and wiped off the fat attached to the knife surface.
"Come on, let me show you the truth."
The author has something to say: [There is no bloody/disgusting/fantasy description in this book, science belongs to science, KY/pushing/leading comments please report manually. 】
It’s not that the author’s heavy-tasting OOC writing collapsed, he was really an anatomical madman in history ==
Leonardo's Anatomy of Europe No.1 Vinci (not
And it seems that the three masters of literature and art have all dissected the general teacher. You need to check the details. Michelangelo should also be an anatomy madman. He dissected a lot under the city hall...
And Da Vinci seems to be the first person to propose the difference between veins and arteries.
The next chapter will not be written in a disgusting direction, nor will it exaggerate the horror atmosphere. Again, science belongs to science.
【January 1, manuscript deposit notes】
Text/Shao Chi 2017-12-12 Source: Lilac Garden
1. Galen dissecting a monkey
(Claudius Galenus, 129-199AD)
In the beginning, the knowledge of anatomy taught in major medical schools in Europe came from the works of the ancient Roman medical scientist Galen.
But be aware that for most of the 1000-year medieval period, the Catholic Church, the mainstream faith in Europe, did not allow dissection of dead bodies.
Therefore, Galen did not dissect the human body. His anatomical works are based on the anatomical analysis of animals, mainly focusing on pigs and primates.
At the time, these were of course unrivaled.But after all, there are many differences in the body structure of humans and animals, and Galen's anatomical conclusions inevitably contain a lot of errors.For example, he believes that there is a small hole in the heart compartment, through which blood can go back and forth between the left and right sides of the heart...
However, due to regulations prohibiting dissection of corpses, these errors have been passed down unchanged for more than 1000 years, and they have also led to a long-term stagnation of medical progress.
2. Da Vinci secretly dissected
(Leonardo da Vinci, 1452-1519)
Of course, there have never been any scholars who were obsessed with medical research and secretly dissected corpses despite the ban, and the most famous of them was Leonardo da Vinci.
Leonardo dissected at least 30 corpses and left behind a rich collection of manuscripts.However, he was so famous that Pope Leo X issued a ban on him, prohibiting him from dissecting the corpse.
However, religion cannot stop the development of science after all. Since the late Middle Ages, various parts of Europe have gradually lifted the ban on dissecting corpses, allowing medical schools to use the corpses of executed prisoners for anatomy teaching and research.
3. Andre Vesalius who turned out
(Andreas Vesalius, 1514-1564)
With the increase of anatomical practice, more and more scholars found that Galen's textbook was full of fallacies and needed to be revised.
In this context, there must be one person who left a strong mark in the history of anatomy, and Vesalius became this famous person in history.
In 1537, at the age of 23, Vesalius became a professor of surgery and anatomy at the University of Padua in Italy.However, Vesalius was not only academically accomplished, but also quite "flexible" in other respects.
He pioneered the anatomy class in the amphitheater where the drama was performed, and sold tickets to the public. The price of each ticket is equivalent to 100 to 200 yuan now, and everyone can come in and listen to the class as long as they buy a ticket.
According to records, more than [-] spectators flocked to the theater to watch his anatomy class at the most, and Vesalius also earned a lot of money.
Later, the cover of Vesalius's pioneering masterpiece "The Structure of the Human Body" used the scene of his lecture in the theater.
Before Heidi could ask Da Vinci why he came, he patted the carriage next to him and motioned her to follow him.
After the two got into the car, Da Vinci finally said, "I'll take you somewhere."
"...As for the rush?"
Heidi suddenly realized that something was wrong, what was this big ball of cloth under their feet?
She hadn't seen him for a long time, originally she just wanted to chat with him, maybe they could make some copper sulfate together for experimentation, who would have thought that she would be suddenly abducted into the carriage.
And it looked like he was going out of town.
The carriage made many twists and turns, and finally stopped not far from the suburbs.
Heidi lifted the curtain and suddenly stopped breathing for a few seconds.
"This is the cemetery."
"Yes." Da Vinci turned over and jumped out of the car neatly, and stretched out his hand towards her: "Get down."
She helped him out of the car, and found that there was not even a grave guard here.
"This is... a wild cemetery?"
"I found several unowned corpses, and they were not buried for a long time."
Da Vinci turned to look at her with a smile in his eyes.
"You are an alchemist, you should know how to dissect, right?"
"Wait—do you want to put the corpse—" Heidi suddenly felt a chill down her back.
"Let's quietly drag one back to be dissected—come here and give me a hand."
"Mr. Da Vinci! We can't—"
Heidi noticed that he even took out the shovel, and tried to stop this behavior: "Don't you think this is a bit too much?!"
"I asked the lord for instructions, and he even allocated a special place for me to dissect." Da Vinci looked at one cemetery after another as if he was picking goods, ready to shovel out the corpses at any time.
"By the way," he turned to look at her with a slightly curious expression, "Since we've known each other for so long, why don't you call me Leonardo?"
"Mr. Leonardo," Heidi took a deep breath, "Can we go back now?"
"No." Da Vinci said politely: "I need to confirm how to draw the human body through dissection."
He has wanted to do this for a long time.
What are ligaments, how do limbs stretch or stretch, and how are human muscles constructed——
There are not many people who can accompany him to do these strange things.
Not only must they trust each other, but they must not be stubborn believers. At the same time, it is best to give some practical advice.
The name Heidi Keithler is a perfect answer.
He obviously knew her character well, so he directly picked a relatively fresh tomb, and began to shovel and shovel for the coffin.
These days, Da Vinci has visited here several times.
Regular cemeteries have to pay a part of the management fee. Some poor families can no longer afford this kind of expenses, so they find such remote and desolate places to bury their relatives and friends. Some people even tie the cross with rough branches.
Heidi looked nervously at the figure, and said with a more serious tone: "What are you going to do after the autopsy? Throw it into the Arno River?
Da Vinci paused, and looked at her in surprise: "Of course it will be buried again?"
These are all weird ideas.
After a while, a crude coffin was exposed, which was almost broken by a shovel.
Da Vinci's eyes lit up, and after digging up the surrounding soil, he thought of a way to pry open the coffin.
The groom had already collected the silver coins, and at this time he also brought a body bag to help.
Heidi wondered how the lord would agree to such a request, and even thought of vomiting for a moment.
But it was also at this time that she felt like a witness to history.
Under the strict religious environment, anatomy is not something that can be made public, and it is even less likely to be approved by the public authority.
But the birth of modern science itself comes from the exploration of anatomy by these painters and sculptors.
Without them, gut and brain functions would not have been identified, let alone those drugs and treatments developed.
Forget it, it is considered a dedication to medicine.
The carriage bumped all the way back, and the two people in the carriage were thinking about the problem.
Da Vinci was thinking about where to cut the knife later, and Heidi was wondering if she would be hanged by the church.
"So, Leonardo, how did you convince the lord?"
"I said..." Da Vinci looked at her with a sly smile: "This is very useful in alchemy."
Actually-
Medici actually agreed! !
Heidi took a breath and subconsciously wanted to refute him, but she really couldn't speak.
Alchemy is the enlightenment of modern chemistry and medicine, and it is indeed possible to get involved with it by force.
The side door had already been opened, and servants came to help carry the body bag.
Heidi subconsciously followed them to the basement, and more absurd things occurred to her on the way.
100 years later, there is still a scientist who associates dissection with theater performances, and charges for tickets——
It is said that every time an anatomy is performed publicly, four or five hundred people will gather to watch the excitement, and the theater tickets are sold out.
Why were these people so weird hundreds of years ago? ?
The underground space is very cold and spacious, and the ventilation effect is also very good.
They divided a closed small hall to complete the experiment, and equipped with clear water and a high platform inside.
The servants put the body bag on the table and walked away as if nothing happened.
The two of them were left here, and the atmosphere was a bit weird.
Da Vinci knew Heidi had concerns, and he wasn't sure if she knew them at all.
——But this person can even create blue out of thin air, he seems to know a little bit about everything, can't he really know that?
He carefully removed the body bag, saluted, and studied the anatomy of the wrist and elbow.
Then I was dumbfounded.
Before I started, I felt that I basically knew everything, but when I really started, my mind was a mess.
After the skin was cut open, it was all yellow, and no muscles or bones could be seen.
Heidi waited for a long time before saying, "This is fat."
The other party looked up at her instantly, as if six words were written in his eyes - you really understand this!
She sighed, took out a newly made glove in her pocket, took a knife and began to explain the structure to him.
"It's called a tendon."
"See this? It's a muscle."
Da Vinci took out the notebook he carried with him and began to draw the internal structure here.
At this time, he moved the pen accurately and quickly without any hesitation.
Heidi is not very familiar with this, but she can't be regarded as a layman.
She has been involved in so many things.
Fundraising for the national debt, the design of airplanes, the innovation of frequency hopping in wireless communication technology -- and her own plastic surgery.
At that time, I was no longer young, and was once ridiculed by the media.
When the doctors were afraid to use the knife, she did her homework and went to see the doctor, pointing to her elbow and the back of her ear, and said, "From here on, help me with a skin lift, and I'll teach you how to do it."
later?
Later, many movie stars rushed to the hospital, pointed to the photos on the wall and said, "I want to do like her too! Just like Heidi!"
"Look at this." She picked up a piece of the white thing and explained, "This is a nerve."
"I have a question." Da Vinci studied the details of the fault, frowned and said, "I feel that the blood vessels... are different, and one is bright and the other is dark. Do you understand this?"
Heidi was a little surprised: "Don't you know the difference between veins and arteries?"
He was also quite surprised: "What is that?"
"What about the structure of the heart?"
"Have you ever seen a human heart?"
OK, got it.
This is the ignorant and uncivilized Middle Ages.
"The anatomy book I read said that blood vessels are all the same, there is no difference." Da Vinci looked closely at the different colors, and said seriously: "But I feel that there are many problems in that book."
"Isn't the church not allowing dissection now?" Heidi suddenly felt that she had grasped something important: "How did the dissection book come about?"
"They can dissect monkeys." Da Vinci didn't seem to feel any problem: "Is the structure of humans and monkeys different?"
Heidi took a deep breath and wiped off the fat attached to the knife surface.
"Come on, let me show you the truth."
The author has something to say: [There is no bloody/disgusting/fantasy description in this book, science belongs to science, KY/pushing/leading comments please report manually. 】
It’s not that the author’s heavy-tasting OOC writing collapsed, he was really an anatomical madman in history ==
Leonardo's Anatomy of Europe No.1 Vinci (not
And it seems that the three masters of literature and art have all dissected the general teacher. You need to check the details. Michelangelo should also be an anatomy madman. He dissected a lot under the city hall...
And Da Vinci seems to be the first person to propose the difference between veins and arteries.
The next chapter will not be written in a disgusting direction, nor will it exaggerate the horror atmosphere. Again, science belongs to science.
【January 1, manuscript deposit notes】
Text/Shao Chi 2017-12-12 Source: Lilac Garden
1. Galen dissecting a monkey
(Claudius Galenus, 129-199AD)
In the beginning, the knowledge of anatomy taught in major medical schools in Europe came from the works of the ancient Roman medical scientist Galen.
But be aware that for most of the 1000-year medieval period, the Catholic Church, the mainstream faith in Europe, did not allow dissection of dead bodies.
Therefore, Galen did not dissect the human body. His anatomical works are based on the anatomical analysis of animals, mainly focusing on pigs and primates.
At the time, these were of course unrivaled.But after all, there are many differences in the body structure of humans and animals, and Galen's anatomical conclusions inevitably contain a lot of errors.For example, he believes that there is a small hole in the heart compartment, through which blood can go back and forth between the left and right sides of the heart...
However, due to regulations prohibiting dissection of corpses, these errors have been passed down unchanged for more than 1000 years, and they have also led to a long-term stagnation of medical progress.
2. Da Vinci secretly dissected
(Leonardo da Vinci, 1452-1519)
Of course, there have never been any scholars who were obsessed with medical research and secretly dissected corpses despite the ban, and the most famous of them was Leonardo da Vinci.
Leonardo dissected at least 30 corpses and left behind a rich collection of manuscripts.However, he was so famous that Pope Leo X issued a ban on him, prohibiting him from dissecting the corpse.
However, religion cannot stop the development of science after all. Since the late Middle Ages, various parts of Europe have gradually lifted the ban on dissecting corpses, allowing medical schools to use the corpses of executed prisoners for anatomy teaching and research.
3. Andre Vesalius who turned out
(Andreas Vesalius, 1514-1564)
With the increase of anatomical practice, more and more scholars found that Galen's textbook was full of fallacies and needed to be revised.
In this context, there must be one person who left a strong mark in the history of anatomy, and Vesalius became this famous person in history.
In 1537, at the age of 23, Vesalius became a professor of surgery and anatomy at the University of Padua in Italy.However, Vesalius was not only academically accomplished, but also quite "flexible" in other respects.
He pioneered the anatomy class in the amphitheater where the drama was performed, and sold tickets to the public. The price of each ticket is equivalent to 100 to 200 yuan now, and everyone can come in and listen to the class as long as they buy a ticket.
According to records, more than [-] spectators flocked to the theater to watch his anatomy class at the most, and Vesalius also earned a lot of money.
Later, the cover of Vesalius's pioneering masterpiece "The Structure of the Human Body" used the scene of his lecture in the theater.
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