
The Wine-Dark Sea Within
A Turbulent History of Blood
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Narrated by:
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Chinua Hawk
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By:
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Dr. Dhun Sethna
About this listen
A revisionist history of medicine, in which blood plays the starring role
Inspired by Homer’s description of the ebb and flow of the “wine dark sea,” the ancient Greeks conceived a back-and-forth movement of blood. That false notion, perpetuated by the influential Roman physician Galen, prevailed for fifteen hundred years until William Harvey proved that blood circulates: the heart pumps blood in one direction through the arteries and it returns through the veins. Harvey’s discovery revolutionized the life sciences by making possible an entirely new quantitative understanding of the cardiovascular system, a way of thinking on which many of our lifesaving medical interventions today depend.
In The Wine-Dark Sea Within, cardiologist Dhun Sethna argues that Harvey’s revelation inaugurated modern medicine and paved the way for groundbreaking advances from intravenous therapy, cardiac imaging, and stent insertions to bypass surgery, dialysis, and heart-lung machines.
Weaving together three thousand years of global history, following bitter feuds and epic alliances, tragic failures and extraordinary advancements, this is a provocative history by a fresh voice in popular science.
©2022 Dr. Dhun Sethna (P)2022 Basic BooksListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
"The discovery of how blood circulates in the human body was a seminal scientific event. The Wine-Dark Sea Within presents an engaging and incredibly comprehensive history of this paradigm-shifting breakthrough."—Sandeep Jauhar, author of Heart
"The Wine-Dark Sea Within is an engrossing look at mankind’s understanding of blood that offers even the most jaded expert a restorative transfusion of delightful history."—Lindsey Fitzharris, author of The Butchering Art
"At once a sweeping history of our love affair with the ‘sacred fluid’ and an engaging biography of the man who forever changed our understanding of its circulation, The Wine-Dark Sea Within offers an adventurous look at the scientific revolution of blood. In its rapid pace and its varied characters, it might be compared to Richard Holmes’s Age of Wonder: encyclopedic but never tarrying too long on the journey from antiquity to the dawn of Enlightenment science."—Brandy Schillace, author of Mr. Humble and Dr. Butcher
"A well-researched and masterful expose. . . . A real tour de force."—P.K. Shah, MD, MACC, Shapell and Webb Family Chair, Clinical Cardiology, Cedars Sinai Medical Center
What listeners say about The Wine-Dark Sea Within
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- A. McNeely
- 08-07-23
Tedious, repetitive but a good story
The history can be a bit tedious and repetitive. The story of discovery itself mirrors much of the history of the philosophy of science. There is the hat tip early in a mention of Thomas Kuhn. THAT name gets correct pronunciation however the narrator bungles too many of the names to mention along the way. A particular personal irritation was the pronunciation of “Zorathustrian”. The producer or director deserves a good thumping to their heads for either not knowing or not caring to help the narrator with the more obscure words. Seriously irritating!
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