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Antonio Cocchi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Italian physician and naturalist (1695–1758)

Antonio Cocchi
Antonio Cocchi
Born(1695-08-03)3 August 1695
Died1 January 1758(1758-01-01) (aged 62)
Occupations
  • Physician
  • naturalist
  • writer
Known forWork onanatomy; early advocacy ofvegetarianism

Antonio Cocchi (3 August 1695 – 1 January 1758) was an Italianphysician,naturalist and writer. He was best known for his work onanatomy.[1]

Biography

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Cocchi was elected aFellow of the Royal Society in 1736, his candidature citation describing him as "a very noted & Skilfull (sic) Physician at Florence, and formerly Professor of Physic and Philosophy in theUniversity of Pisa, desirous of being elected into this Honourable Society; he is a Gentleman of very distinguished merit both in his profession and all other parts of Natural & Philosophical Learning; he is the Author of Several Books and is now publishing some Greek Medical Writers never before printed from the MSS in the Laurentian Library; he is also at this time Secretary to a Society newly Set up at Florence very much on the Same foot as the Royal Society is here"[2]

Cocchi spent three years in England, where he knewIsaac Newton. Although offered a position by thePrincess of Wales, he returned to teach in Tuscany.[3]

Cocci was also aclassical scholar, producing thefirst edition of theEphesian Tale, a novel byXenophon of Ephesus, as well as other work onGreek romances. HisDiscorso primo sopra Asclepiade (1758), onAsclepiades of Bithynia, appeared also in his collectedOpere (1824).[4]Elizabeth Rawson called theDiscorso "learned and often penetrating, though over-enthusiastic about his subject's moral virtues."[5]

Cocchi's writing style was characterised by purity of diction, and in his own time was regarded as a model for scientific writing.[5]

Vegetarianism

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Cocchi was avegetarian and was influenced byPythagoras.[6] He authored the bookDel vitto pitagorico per uso della medicina in 1743. It was translated byRobert Dodsley into English asThe Pythagorean Diet in 1745.[6][7][8]Voltaire admired the book.[9]

Cocchi documented the health benefits of a vegetable diet. He was the first to argue thatscurvy may occur from lack of vegetables in the diet.[6]

Selected publications

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Dell'anatomia, 1745

References

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  1. ^Santi, Raffaella; Conti, Andrea A.; Nesi, Gabriella (2011). "What a pity the master cannot admire his pupil's work: the autopsy of the anatomist Antonio Cocchi (1695-1758) performed by his pupil Saverio Manetti".Cardiovasc. Pathol.20 (4). United States:238–41.doi:10.1016/j.carpath.2010.05.002.PMID 20619688.
  2. ^"Library and Archive Catalogue". Royal Society. Retrieved17 March 2012.
  3. ^Elizabeth Rawson, "The Life and Death of Asclepiades of Bithynia,"Classical Quarterly 32.2 (1982), p. 361.
  4. ^Rawson, "Asclepiades," p. 361. An English translation was made in 1762, and the work can also be found in English in R.M. Green,Asclepiades: His Life and Writings (1955).
  5. ^abRawson, "Asclepiades," p. 361.
  6. ^abcPreece, Rod. (2008).Sins of the Flesh: A History of Ethical Vegetarian Thought. UBC Press. pp. 174-175.ISBN 978-0-7748-1509-3
  7. ^Rousseau, George Sebastian. (1991).Enlightenment Borders: Pre- and Post-modern Discourses: Medical, Scientific. Manchester University Press. p. 301.ISBN 0-7190-3506-6
  8. ^Gentilcore, David. (2010).Pomodoro!: A History of the Tomato in Italy. Columbia University Press. pp. 39-40.ISBN 978-0-231-15206-8
  9. ^Albala, Ken. (2002).Insensible Perspiration and Oily Vegetable Humor: An Eighteenth-Century Controversy over Vegetarianism.Gastronomica 2 (3): 29-36.

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