Image for Physiology: The Language of Life and Nature

Physiology: The Language of Life and Nature (New edition)

Part of the Natur, Wissenschaft und die Kuenste / Nature, Science and the Arts / Nature, Science et les Arts series
See all formats and editions

This book paints a flowing picture of the relationship beween life and nature, through the evolution of a word – physiology.

Today, it denotes a scientific discipline at the intersection of biology and medicine, signifying the «study of life».

Yet, physiology manifests a split personality in the course of history.

It came down to us from the ancient Greeks, where it represented the «study of nature», or «natural philosophy» – the precursor of modern-day «science».

Physiology originates from an older Greek root, physis – meaning «nature» itself – that stretches far back to the birth of Greek thought.

How did this word generate two such disparate meanings?

What does this word tell us, historically, about humankind’s grasp of the essence of nature and the essence of life – and the interrelationship between the two?

The author follows an etymological path into the distant past, in writing the biography of the word «physiology».

The book delves into linguistic pre-history, in search of the primordially interwoven views of life and nature – and the words that symbolized those views.

It tracks the evolving meaning of those words in Western civilization across time, space, language, and culture.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£36.88 Save 20.00%
RRP £46.10
Product Details
3034304854 / 9783034304856
Paperback / softback
612.009
24/11/2015
Germany
English
202 pages
24 cm