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"Imagination, Maternal Desire and Embryology in Thomas Fienus," in: Professors, Physicians and Practioners in the History of Medicine: Essays in Honor of Nancy Siraisi (Dordrecht: Springer, 2017), 211-225
[article]
2019
A pregnant woman encounters a wolf in the woods. She is so scared that her strong emotion of fear imprints the wolf's morphological traces on the fetus in her womb. Another pregnant woman craves strawberries or cherries so intensely that she leaves certain marks or impressions of these fruits on the fetus. The belief that the power of maternal emotions such as desire and fear can imprint certain marks, signs or signatures on the fetus was widespread in the early modern period. This belief was
doi:10.17613/w94s-9159
fatcat:vlrwnisjgzbxnekyz7sl22ypke