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10.2: The Mechanical Theory of Digestion

  • Page ID
    57055
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    Through the generations, endless explanations of digestion and its relationship to health were advanced. Endless diets and other digestive treatments were proposed. But essentially, they all followed the oldest idea—that the digestive process was mainly mechanical.

    In this view, the teeth tore and ground food into small fragments, which proceeded into the core of the body. There, the body somehow squeezed out a kind of nutritive juice. Most physicians thought this juice held a single nutritive factor, from which a life force came.

    Long before the first clues to the truth appeared, human innards were studied, those of the living through wounds and those of the dead through post-mortem studies. But all those early researchers saw was a muscular bag (the stomach) followed by a long, twisted muscular canal (the intestines). Squeezing seemed to be about its only possible function. After all, what else could this tangled tube do? Why else would the stomach and the tube be so muscled? These studies of human anatomy seemed to confirm the old idea that some vital juice was squeezed out of food.


    This page titled 10.2: The Mechanical Theory of Digestion is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Judi S. Morrill via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.