informed, but that they welcome further information
from whomsoever and from wheresoever it may come; nor
are they so narrow-minded as to imagine any of the
arts or sciences transmitted to us by the ancients,
in such a state of forwardness or completeness, that
nothing is left for the ingenuity and industry of
others. On the contrary, very many maintain that
all we know is still infinitely less than all that
still remains unknown; nor do philosophers pin their
faith to others’ precepts in such wise that
they lose their liberty, and cease to give credence
to the conclusions of their proper senses. Neither
do they swear such fealty to their mistress Antiquity,
that they openly, and in sight of all, deny and desert
their friend Truth. But even as they see that
the credulous and vain are disposed at the first blush
to accept and believe everything that is proposed
to them, so do they observe that the dull and unintellectual
are indisposed to see what lies before their eyes,
and even deny the light of the noonday sun. They
teach us in our course of philosophy to sedulously
avoid the fables of the poets and the fancies of the
vulgar, as the false conclusions of the sceptics.
And then the studious and good and true, never suffer
their minds to be warped by the passions of hatred
and envy, which unfit men duly to weigh the arguments
that are advanced in behalf of truth, or to appreciate
the proposition that is even fairly demonstrated.
Neither do they think it unworthy of them to change
their opinion if truth and undoubted demonstration
require them to do so. They do not esteem it
discreditable to desert error, though sanctioned by
the highest antiquity, for they know full well that
to err, to be deceived, is human; that many things
are discovered by accident and that many may be learned
indifferently from any quarter, by an old man from
a youth, by a person of understanding from one of
inferior capacity.
My dear colleagues, I had no purpose to swell this
treatise into a large volume by quoting the names
and writings of anatomists, or to make a parade of
the strength of my memory, the extent of my reading,
and the amount of my pains; because I profess both
to learn and to teach anatomy, not from books but
from dissections; not from the positions of philosophers
but from the fabric of nature; and then because I
do not think it right or proper to strive to take
from the ancients any honor that is their due, nor
yet to dispute with the moderns, and enter into controversy
with those who have excelled in anatomy and been my
teachers. I would not charge with wilful falsehood
any one who was sincerely anxious for truth, nor lay
it to any one’s door as a crime that he had
fallen into error. I avow myself the partisan
of truth alone; and I can indeed say that I have used
all my endeavours, bestowed all my pains on an attempt
to produce something that should be agreeable to the
good, profitable to the learned, and useful to letters.
Farewell, most worthy Doctors, And think kindly of
your Anatomist,