El hombre como palacio industrial
Lithograph, Fritz Kahn, 1930
Fritz Kahn (1888–1968) was a
German-Jewish gynaecologist and science author who developed a
sophisticated graphic analogy between anatomy and machinery. His
work was widely distributed in Germany until it was banned under
the Nazi regime. He continued to publish, relocating to Palestine
and Paris before escaping to the USA with the help of Albert
Einstein. In a later work from 1943, he describes the relationship
between man and machine: “[they] exhibit far-reaching
similarities. Both derive their energy from the combustion of
carbon, which they obtain from plants. Man, the weaker machine,
utilizes fresh plants for fuel, while the locomotive, a stronger
machine, uses fossilized plants in the form of coal.”