In January 1800, a naked boy covered in scars emerged from the freezing woods of southern France, walking on all fours and impervious to the snow. He walked straight into the center of one of history's greatest scientific debates. This is the story of Victor of Aveyron, the most famous and best-documented feral child who ever lived.
This episode unpacks how Enlightenment philosophers obsessed with the noble savage saw Victor as a living experiment, how a young doctor refused to give up on him, and how modern medicine completely reinterpreted who this traumatized boy really was.
Victor arrived mute, ate only raw vegetables, bore 23 scars including a deep slash across his throat, and frolicked happily naked in the snow
Psychiatrist Philippe Pinel deemed him an idiot, but medical student Jean Marc Gaspard Itard adopted him, named him Victor, and spent years trying to teach speech and empathy
Despite intense conditioning Victor learned only two phrases, lait and oh Dieu, though he learned to console his grieving housekeeper, proving emotional connection
Modern experts like Uta Frith argue Victor was autistic, citing his need for routine, stimming, meltdowns, and insensitivity to pain and cold
Surgeon Serge Aroles argues he could not have survived alone as a young child, suggesting his scars came from abuse and attempted murder before abandonment, while Itard's methods founded modern special education
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