
You're Dead to Me Renaissance Medicine (Radio Edit)
25 snips
May 8, 2026 Ria Lina, comedian and PhD virologist, brings science-savvy humour. Alana Skuse, early modern literature and medicine scholar, maps 16th–18th century medical culture. They explore physicians, barber-surgeons and apothecaries. They discuss bizarre cures, midwifery and women healers. They cover William Harvey’s blood discoveries, quacks, public spectacles and the rise of medical professionalism.
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Doctors Read Urine Not Just Pulses
- Uroscopy (reading urine) was central to diagnosis and physicians sometimes sniffed or even tasted patients' urine.
- Pulse-taking was ritualised but less diagnostically useful than urine examination in practice.
Rebalance Humours With Diet And Purges
- Treat disease by rebalancing humours primarily through regimen: diet and lifestyle changes.
- Physicians recommended foods opposite to the offending humour and relied on the three great remedies: bleeding, vomiting and diarrhoea.
Harvey Disproved Galenic Blood Theory
- William Harvey transformed medicine by demonstrating blood circulates and the heart pumps, challenging Galen's liver-centric model.
- He used ligatures and measurements to show circulation rather than infinite liver-produced blood.






