Seeing the divide within the doctor community itself, the York Bishop seized the opportunity to question.
"However, although Officer Hastings' so-called resurrection is not a miracle, I have reasonable suspicion that his 'resurrection' may have been due to some despicable and evil methods used by you doctors. Even if we don't mention the recurring murder-and-grave-robbing cases from two years back, going back to 1818, Andrew Ure's nearly blasphemous experiment on a corpse of an executed criminal at the University of Glasgow, I believe no one would have forgotten it."
Upon hearing this, everyone immediately recalled what he was referring to.
Because that incident was too famous and even appeared in newspapers. The "Scottish Medical Journal" recorded the entire experiment in detail.
To be precise, Andrew Ure inserted electrodes into the corpse's neck, buttocks, and heels, and then stimulated it with different levels of electric current.