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. 2018;7(1):73-103.
doi: 10.5840/jems2018714.

The Weight of the Air: Santorio's Thermometers and the Early History of Medical Quantification Reconsidered

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The Weight of the Air: Santorio's Thermometers and the Early History of Medical Quantification Reconsidered

Fabrizio Bigotti. J Early Mod Stud (Bucur). 2018.

Abstract

The early history of thermometry is most commonly described as the result of a continuous development rather than the product of a single brilliant mind, and yet scholars have often credited the Italian physician Santorio Santori (1561-1636) with the invention of the first thermometers. The purpose of using such instruments within the traditional context of Galenic medicine, however, has not been investigated and scholars have consistently assumed that, being subject to the influence of atmospheric pressure and environmental heat, Santorio's instruments provided unreliable measurements. The discovery that, as early as 1612, Santorio describes all vacuum-related phenomena as effects of the atmospheric pressure of the air, provides ample room for reconsidering his role in the development of precision instruments and the early history of thermometry in particular. By drawing on a variety of written and visual sources, some unpublished, in the first part of this article I argue that Santorio's appreciation of phenomena related to the weight of the air allowed him to construct the first thermometers working as sealed devices. Finally, in the second part, I consider Santorio's use of the thermometer as related to the seventeenth-century medical practice and his way to measure the temperature as based on a wide sample of individuals.

Keywords: Galen; Santorio Santori (Sanctorius); University of Padua; early modern medicine; temperature; thermometer.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Biancani (1617)
Figure 2
Figure 2
Telioux (1611)
Figure 3
Figure 3
Obizzi’s Manuscript, Frontispiece a. Obizzi's Manuscript, Detail b. Obizzi (1617)
Figure 3
Figure 3
Obizzi’s Manuscript, Frontispiece a. Obizzi's Manuscript, Detail b. Obizzi (1617)
Figure 3
Figure 3
Obizzi’s Manuscript, Frontispiece a. Obizzi's Manuscript, Detail b. Obizzi (1617)
Figure 4
Figure 4
Santorio (1626)
Figure 5
Figure 5
Santorio’s hand-thermometer A (1625) a. Detail
Figure 5
Figure 5
Santorio’s hand-thermometer A (1625) a. Detail
Figure 6
Figure 6
Accademia del Cimento (1667) a. Sealing Methods (1667) b. Detail
Figure 6
Figure 6
Accademia del Cimento (1667) a. Sealing Methods (1667) b. Detail
Figure 6
Figure 6
Accademia del Cimento (1667) a. Sealing Methods (1667) b. Detail
Figure 7
Figure 7
Santorio Hand Thermometer B (1625)
Figure 8
Figure 8
The so-called Galileo’s Thermoscope. Museo Galileo, Florence
Figure 9
Figure 9
a. Delmedigo’s engraving of a sealed thermometer with marks (1621–1629), from Adler (1997) b. Santorio’s engraving of a mouth thermometer (1625)
Figure 9
Figure 9
a. Delmedigo’s engraving of a sealed thermometer with marks (1621–1629), from Adler (1997) b. Santorio’s engraving of a mouth thermometer (1625)
Figure 10
Figure 10
Replica of Santorio’s thermometer. Science Museum of London, 1970
Figure 11
Figure 11
Piccolomini’s representation of intensity and time (1585)
Figure 12
Figure 12
Santorio’s thermometers and pulsilogia (1625)

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