Here's a question I thought I would ask, who involved in these exchanges is interested enough to go through the press accounts of Sept. 14th to find what Dr. Phillips actually said?
In the Times, we read two examples.
On discovery of the body about 6:30 (when Phillips arrived):
- "Stiffness of the limbs was not marked, but it was commencing."
Later, sometime after 2:00 pm, at the mortuary he noticed:
- "The stiffness of the limbs was then well-marked."
- "On the left side the stiffness was more noticeable, and especially in the fingers, which were partly closed."
Are there any other quotes from Phillips on the subject, somewhere in the press?
So, what was contemporary thinking concerning the onset of Rigor Mortis?
One publication Legal Medicine, by Charles Meymott Tidy, was published in 1882, and is available on the net.
Modern theory is also readily available, so we can see where Phillips may have erred, if he did.
Anyone else interested in putting some thoughts together based on the science of the time, when compared with today's thinking?
In the Times, we read two examples.
On discovery of the body about 6:30 (when Phillips arrived):
- "Stiffness of the limbs was not marked, but it was commencing."
Later, sometime after 2:00 pm, at the mortuary he noticed:
- "The stiffness of the limbs was then well-marked."
- "On the left side the stiffness was more noticeable, and especially in the fingers, which were partly closed."
Are there any other quotes from Phillips on the subject, somewhere in the press?
So, what was contemporary thinking concerning the onset of Rigor Mortis?
One publication Legal Medicine, by Charles Meymott Tidy, was published in 1882, and is available on the net.
Modern theory is also readily available, so we can see where Phillips may have erred, if he did.
Anyone else interested in putting some thoughts together based on the science of the time, when compared with today's thinking?
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