DiscoverThat Shakespeare LifeThe Venetian Doctor Who Turned ‘Hot’ and ‘Cold’ Into Numbers
The Venetian Doctor Who Turned ‘Hot’ and ‘Cold’ Into Numbers

The Venetian Doctor Who Turned ‘Hot’ and ‘Cold’ Into Numbers

Update: 2025-11-03
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In 1612—just one year after Shakespeare wrote The Tempest—Venetian physician Santorio Santori transformed Galileo’s simple thermoscope into the world’s first thermometer by adding a calibrated scale and sealing the device. His invention marked the birth of quantified medicine, turning vague sensations of “hot” and “cold” into measurable data that could guide treatment. In this episode, historian of medicine Dr. Fabrizio Bigotti joins us to explore Santorio’s remarkable innovations, how they predated Galileo’s own instruments, and why this quiet inventor deserves recognition as the true father of the thermometer.



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The Venetian Doctor Who Turned ‘Hot’ and ‘Cold’ Into Numbers

The Venetian Doctor Who Turned ‘Hot’ and ‘Cold’ Into Numbers