Opening to Dr. William Taylor's address on maternal impression
1 2018-10-04T21:01:51+00:00 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522 3 1 The first page of the William T. Taylor manuscript on maternal impressions affecting the fetus (MSS 2/031) held at the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. plain 2018-10-04T21:01:51+00:00 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522This page is referenced by:
-
1
2018-10-03T18:46:38+00:00
The Skepticism of Science
5
plain
2018-10-10T16:37:39+00:00
Advances in 19th Century medical science offered further skepticism to the concept of maternal impression. August Förster (1822-1865), a German anatomist who wrote on maternal impression, rejected the many stories found in medical literature. Förster's many reasons for this rejection came from his scientific understanding. One argument was that most malformations occur during the first week or month of pregnancy. This is before the mother usually has any idea that they are carrying a fetus.
Others, such as the French physician Ernest Martin (1876-1934), sought a medical explanation for maternal impression. In his 1880 book, Histoire des monstres: depuis l'antiquité jusqu'à nos jours, Martin claims that the imagination plays a mechanical role in the creation of monsters. This mechanical role occurs when the mother’s mental state is conveyed through the nervous system. This caused the uterus to contract, bringing the fetus under pressure and causing malformations.
Through the efforts of those such as Turner and Martin, beliefs in maternal impression continued through the nineteenth century. A manuscript by Dr. William Turner held at the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia is an example. Dated 1876, it is an address to the Philadelphia County Medical Society, which can read in its entirety here. Turner, while more cautious than many of his earlier predecessors, asserted that maternal impression is a real phenomenon. Like Martin, he used medical explanations for the phenomenon.