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On Heredity and Medical Skepticism — The Essays of Montaigne

The Essays of Montaigne - On Heredity and Medical Skepticism

Michel de Montaigne

The Essays of Montaigne

On Heredity and Medical Skepticism

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Analysis by the Wide Reads editorial team·Reviewed against the source text·Updated December 16, 2025

Summary

On Heredity and Medical Skepticism

The Essays of Montaigne by Michel de Montaigne

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Montaigne says his book is faggoted at leisure without second thoughts, each piece shown as it came from the forge, and by the liberality of years he has been acquainted with the stone, the disease he most dreaded from infancy.

He had fancied it insupportable, yet finds it more bearable than imagination promised when the soul is free from fear of death and from physic's menaces; pain may perfect what he could not resolve about death, though he dreads swinging between fearing and desiring the last day. Philosophy should govern understanding, not forbid sighs; he complains but does not roar, and tests himself in torment by setting remote discourse when visitors think him worst. Maecenas and Tamerlane show how men cling to miserable being rather than quit life, yet Montaigne still prefers neither to fear nor to wish the last day.

He marvels how a drop of seed carries bodily form and even inclinations of fathers across irregular generations; his father felt nothing till sixty-seven, yet Montaigne alone among many siblings inherited the malady decades later.

His ancestors lived long without physic; the antipathy is hereditary and fortified by reason, though he would have wrestled with mere instinct had reason not supported it. Crafty humility confesses ignorance in nature so others may trust what we claim to know; Montaigne finds incomprehensible wonders in ordinary seed without hunting foreign miracles.

Experience shows those who take much physic soonest sick and longest ill; physicians corrupt health, claim successes, blame rattling coaches, and lie at pleasure because health depends on vanity of promises. Cato helped banish medicine from Rome; country people still cure with strong wine and saffron while learned men die sooner than their patients.

Rome banished medicine six hundred years; purging may not be nature's aim; contradictory counsel makes every prescription a hazard. Herophilus, Hippocrates, Paracelsus, and a hundred schools overturn one another; who ever saw one physician approve another's without alteration? Surgery is more certain because it sees what it touches.

He has tried baths without miracle; Lahontan's happy valley was ruined when a notary taught lawsuits and a physician taught fevers. A goat bred for celestial blood already held stones in its paunch.

A letter to Madame de Duras interrupts: he paints his passage, not posterity's praise, refuses fame after death, and cites Pliny and Celsus harsher than he. Germans bathe all day, Italians drink nine days and scour with doccie streams; every nation contradicts the next while crowds still flock to waters that rarely harm and never work miracles.

A company once laughed at a pill of a hundred ingredients that could not stir one gravel atom; Montaigne mocks assurance from experiments no three witnesses could repeat. He may one day clutch opium like Pericles' scrolls, yet now pleads inherited skepticism with form, not obstinacy for glory.

He honours good physicians and hates only the art that usurps tyrannical authority over creatures weakened by sickness and fear. Fear and impatience make us acquiesce; cowardice bends belief. He mistrusts occult simples, professional quarrels, and experiments that could never be repeated across infinite variables; three physicians on his own diseases never agreed.

A gentleman cut for stone had none; a bishop opened after promised surgery carried kidney trouble only. Promises of physic route drugs by occult commission while dissentient prescriptions killed Etienne de la Boetie. Make water often, or not; bathe hot, or not; every rule has its contrary twin.

He will send for physicians for company and harmless orders, not submission; Lycurgus allowed wine to the sick Spartan who hated it in health. Pericles showed parchment amulets as proof he had fallen low; Montaigne may clutch opium with the same shame. There never were two opinions alike, no more than two hairs; their most universal quality is diversity.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Questioning Medical Authority

Pain and fear make us hand our judgment to anyone who promises relief, even when the promise contradicts the last promise. Montaigne says physicians were the only men permitted to lie at pleasure because health depends on the vanity of their promises. When fear presses hardest, ask whether you are choosing care or surrendering judgment before you accept every new regimen as necessity.

Coming Up in Chapter 94

After physicians and inheritance, Montaigne weighs profit against honesty. Tiberius will refuse poison for Arminius, yet emperors and kings will later hire traitors when open revenge is too inconvenient.

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Original text
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Chapter 93

On Heredity and Medical Skepticism

OF THE RESEMBLANCE OF CHILDREN TO THEIR FATHERS This faggoting up of so many divers pieces is so done that I never set pen to paper but when I have too much idle time, and never anywhere but at home; so that it is compiled after divers interruptions and intervals, occasions keeping me sometimes many months elsewhere. As to the rest, I never correct my first by any second conceptions; I, peradventure, may alter a word or so, but ‘tis only to vary the phrase, and not to destroy my former meaning. I have a mind to represent the progress…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"acquainted with the stone: their commerce and long converse do not well pass away without some such inconvenience."

— Montaigne

Context: Age's gift

Opening malady.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne says that by the liberality of years he has been acquainted with the stone, the disease he most dreaded from infancy onward. Feared trouble arrives. When a long-dreaded condition finally appears, compare the lived reality carefully with the dark imagination that tortured you beforehand.

"impression not only of the bodily form, but even of the thoughts and inclinations of our fathers"

— Montaigne

Context: Heredity

Central wonder.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne asks how a drop of seed can carry impressions not only of bodily form but of the thoughts and inclinations of our fathers. Inheritance runs deep. When family patterns return in body or temperament, consider what traveled invisibly long before you ever noticed them.

"tyrannical authority physicians usurp over poor creatures"

— Montaigne (via Aesop)

Context: Physician power

Second half.

In Today's Words:

Aesop, quoted by Montaigne, shows the tyrannical authority physicians usurp over poor creatures weakened by sickness and fear. Fear invites dominion. In any field where the frightened client hears jargon from the expert, watch for tyrannical authority that steadily outruns proof, evidence, sense, and shame.

"two opinions alike, no more than two hairs, or two grains: their most universal quality is diversity"

— Montaigne

Context: Close

Diversity thesis.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne says there never were two opinions alike, no more than two hairs, and their most universal quality is diversity. Consensus is rare. When many experts claim certainty yet cannot agree, treat disagreement itself as useful data about the limits of their art and proof.

Thematic Threads

Authority

In This Chapter

Montaigne questions medical authority by observing that his family lived long lives without doctors, challenging the assumption that experts always know best

Development

Building on earlier skepticism of social conventions, now extending to professional authority

In Your Life:

You might recognize this when a professional uses jargon you don't understand instead of explaining their reasoning clearly

Class

In This Chapter

Physicians use Latin terminology and complex theories to maintain social distance from patients, creating artificial barriers to understanding

Development

Continues theme of how social hierarchies are maintained through exclusion and mystery

In Your Life:

You see this when service providers make you feel ignorant for asking basic questions about their work

Identity

In This Chapter

Montaigne defines himself against medical orthodoxy, choosing natural observation over expert opinion as core to his character

Development

Deepens his commitment to authentic self-knowledge over external validation

In Your Life:

You face this choice when deciding whether to trust your instincts or defer to someone else's supposed expertise

Fear

In This Chapter

Fear of death makes people vulnerable to medical charlatans who promise control over the uncontrollable

Development

Introduced here as a driving force behind false expertise

In Your Life:

You might notice how your deepest fears make you susceptible to anyone claiming they can protect you from them

Heredity

In This Chapter

Montaigne marvels at inheriting his father's kidney stones, seeing mystery in how traits pass between generations

Development

Introduced here as wonder at life's fundamental mysteries

In Your Life:

You might recognize patterns in your family—both gifts and challenges—that seem to skip generations or appear unexpectedly

You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.

  1. 1

    What does Montaigne find most puzzling about inheriting kidney stones from his father?

    ▶One way to read it

    He marvels that a drop of seed can carry not just physical traits but thoughts and inclinations across generations, wondering how such complex inheritance works.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why does Montaigne's story about physicians contradicting each other strengthen his argument against medical authority?

    ▶One way to read it

    If experts constantly disagree, their claims to special knowledge become suspect. Their contradictions reveal that medicine is often guesswork dressed up as science.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see Montaigne's criticism of physicians playing out in modern healthcare or other expert fields?

    ▶One way to read it

    Financial advisors often give conflicting advice, or nutritionists flip between declaring foods healthy or harmful. Like Montaigne's doctors, they profit from our anxieties.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    How would you apply Montaigne's approach when facing a serious health decision with uncertain expert advice?

    ▶One way to read it

    Gather multiple opinions, ask about success rates and risks, trust your body's signals, and remember that experts profit from your fear. Make decisions based on evidence, not authority.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Montaigne's willingness to endure pain without physicians reveal about how we should face life's uncertainties?

    ▶One way to read it

    He suggests we're stronger than we think and that accepting uncertainty with dignity beats surrendering to false promises of control from supposed experts.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Decode the Expert

Think of someone who recently tried to sell you something or convince you of their expertise - a mechanic, salesperson, consultant, or advisor. Write down exactly what they said and how they said it. Then analyze their language and behavior using Montaigne's framework for spotting false expertise.

Consider:

  • •Did they explain things in plain language you could understand and repeat to someone else?
  • •When you asked questions, did they welcome them or deflect with more jargon?
  • •If previous clients had problems, how did they explain those failures?

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you trusted your own judgment over expert advice. What happened, and what did you learn about when to listen to experts versus when to trust yourself?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 94: The Price of Compromise

After physicians and inheritance, Montaigne weighs profit against honesty. Tiberius will refuse poison for Arminius, yet emperors and kings will later hire traitors when open revenge is too inconvenient.

Continue to Chapter 94
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Study guides, teaching tools, themes, and the full library.More ways to read The Essays of Montaigne: study guides, teaching tools, and the wider library.

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What this chapter teaches

Theme analyses that draw on this chapter and apply it to modern life.

  • Embracing UncertaintyMontaigne on doubt, limits of reason, and living without false certainty. Eight essays for when expert answers fail and judgment itself wobbles.

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