Abstract
Sanctorius was an important Renaissance physician and physiologist. He is best known for his role in developing experimental medicine and incorporating instruments of quantification like the thermometer into clinical medicine, and he is considered the founder of metabolic studies. Engaging in an extended period of self-experimentation, Sanctorius employed a specifically designed weighing device to measure his ingestion, excretion, and body weight under different conditions over the course of 30 years, using this data to quantify insensible perspiration, the perspiration occurring through respiration and the pores.
References
For a more extensive list of works by Sanctorius, including editions and translations, see Arturo Castiglione 1931.
Primary Literature
Sanctorius, Sanctorius. 1612. Commentaria in artem medicinalem Galeni. Franciscum Somascum. Venice.
Sanctorius, Sanctorius. 1614. Ars de statica medicina sectionibus aphorismorum septem comprehensa. Nicolaum Polum. Venice.
Sanctorius, Sanctorius. 1626. Commentaria in primam Fen primi libri Canonis Avicennae. Venice.
Sanctorius, Sanctorius. 1629. Commentaria in primam sectionem aphorismorum Hippocratis. Marcum Antonium Brogollium. Venice.
Sanctorius, Sanctorius. 1676. Medicina statica: Or, rules of health. Trans. J.D. London: John Starkey.
Sanctorius, Sanctorius. 1718. Medicina statica: Being the aphorisms of Sanctorius. Translated with large explanations by John Quincy. London: W. Newton.
Secondary Literature
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Purnis, J. (2016). Sanctorius. In: Sgarbi, M. (eds) Encyclopedia of Renaissance Philosophy. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-02848-4_970-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-02848-4_970-1
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