The Smoke of the Soul : Medicine, Physiology and Religion in Early Modern England / Richard Sugg, Department of English Studies, Durham University, UK.
The Physiology of the Soul -- The Soul in Three Dimensions : Pietro Pomponazzi and Andreas Vesalius -- Aspiring Souls (I) : Tamburlaine the Great -- Aspiring Souls (II) : Doctor Faustus -- Painful Inquisition: Body-Soul Problems in Early Modern Christianity -- The Differential Soul : Women, Fools and Personal Identity -- The Dying Soul (I) : Christian Mortalism as Religious Heresy -- The Dying Soul (II) : Mortalism as Literary Fantasy -- Anatomy and the Rise of the Brain -- Conclusion : The True Location of the Soul.
Summary:
"What was the soul? For hundreds of years Christians agreed that it was the essential, immortal core of each individual believer, and of the Christian faith in general. Despite this, there was no agreement on where the soul was, what it was, or how it could be joined to the material body. By focusing on the spirits of blood which were alleged to join body and soul, this book explores the peculiar problems, anxieties, and excitement generated by a zone where spirit met matter, and the earthly the divine. It shows how pious but rigorous Christians such as John Donne and Walter Raleigh expressed their dissatisfaction with existing theories of body-soul integration; how prone the soul was to being materialised; and how an increasingly scientific medical culture hunted the material aspects of the soul out of the human body"--Provided by publisher.
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