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The Mysteries Within: A Surgeon Reflects on Medical Myths
by Sherwin B. Nuland

New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000

In The Mysteries Within, the bestselling, National Book Award author of How We Die takes us into our own bodies to show how we continue to cling to myth and superstition even as our knowledge of our most hidden inner organs increases.

As a veteran surgeon, Sherwin Nuland is familiar with such organs as the heart, stomach, liver, spleen, and uterus. In folklore and legend, these organs have been given “personalities” or behaviors that often reflected prevailing philosophies of the time. Although we think of ourselves as living in a scientific age, we have inherited many of these folktales and illusions, and we are often comforted by what they tell us about ourselves, even when the legends are inaccurate. In tracing these legends from primitive times to the present day, Dr. Nuland shows how our current knowledge of these organs has emerged from a rich history of imaginative speculation about how the human body works and what role each of these major organs plays. (Our early ancestors believed that the organs were independent creatures living within their bodies). He illustrates his point by recounting riveting stories of operations, such as a stomach surgery to remove a mysterious substance from a six-week old infant, an operation on a woman whose liver was badly damaged in an automobile accident, and heart surgery to open a valve in a dying woman. He explains how each of these organs behaved characteristically, then places this behavior in a historical context.

The Mysteries Within is a brilliant blend of myth and science, a lively exploration of medicine, history and folklore. Eloquent and insightful, it is a book about the human body and, at the same time, an exploration of the human mind and spirit, especially our somewhat contradictory thirst for knowledge about ourselves and our quest for an immortality that transcends the physical body.

Sherwin B. Nuland, M.D., F.A.C.S., is clinical professor of surgery at Yale School of Medicine, where he has taught since 1962. He is the author of several previous books, among them How We Die, a national bestseller that has been translated into sixteen languages. How We Die won the National Book Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics’ Circle Award. More recently he wrote The Wisdom of the Body (published in paperback as How We Live). Dr. Nuland lives in Connecticut.

 

 
   
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