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Vitalism

Vitalism is a belief that starts from the premise that "living organisms are fundamentally different from non-living entities because they contain some non-physical element or are governed by different principles than are inanimate things."[1][a] Where vitalism explicitly invokes a vital principle, that element is often referred to as the "vital spark", "energy", "élan vital" (coined by vitalist Henri Bergson), "vital force", or "vis vitalis", which some equate with the soul. In the 18th and 19th centuries, vitalism was discussed among biologists, between those who felt that the known mechanics of physics would eventually explain the difference between life and non-life and vitalists who argued that the processes of life could not be reduced to a mechanistic process. Vitalist biologists such as Johannes Reinke proposed testable hypotheses meant to show inadequacies with mechanistic explanations, but their experiments failed to provide support for vitalism. Biologists now consider vitalism in this sense to have been refuted by empirical evidence, and hence regard it either as a superseded scientific theory,[4] or, since the mid-20th century, as a pseudoscience.[5][6]

Vitalism has a long history in medical philosophies: many traditional healing practices posited that disease results from some imbalance in vital forces.

History edit

Ancient times edit

The notion that bodily functions are due to a vitalistic principle existing in all living creatures has roots going back at least to ancient Egypt.[7] In Greek philosophy, the Milesian school proposed natural explanations deduced from materialism and mechanism. However, by the time of Lucretius, this account was supplemented, (for example, by the unpredictable clinamen of Epicurus), and in Stoic physics, the pneuma assumed the role of logos. Galen believed the lungs draw pneuma from the air, which the blood communicates throughout the body.[8]

Medieval edit

In Europe, medieval physics was influenced by the idea of pneuma, helping to shape later aether theories.

Early modern edit

Vitalists included English anatomist Francis Glisson (1597–1677) and the Italian doctor Marcello Malpighi (1628–1694).[9] Caspar Friedrich Wolff (1733–1794) is considered to be the father of epigenesis in embryology, that is, he marks the point when embryonic development began to be described in terms of the proliferation of cells rather than the incarnation of a preformed soul. However, this degree of empirical observation was not matched by a mechanistic philosophy: in his Theoria Generationis (1759), he tried to explain the emergence of the organism by the actions of a vis essentialis (an organizing, formative force). Carl Reichenbach (1788–1869) later developed the theory of Odic force, a form of life-energy that permeates living things.

In the 17th century, modern science responded to Newton's action at a distance and the mechanism of Cartesian dualism with vitalist theories: that whereas the chemical transformations undergone by non-living substances are reversible, so-called "organic" matter is permanently altered by chemical transformations (such as cooking).[10]

As worded by Charles Birch and John B. Cobb, "the claims of the vitalists came to the fore again" in the 18th century:[9] "Georg Ernst Stahl's followers were active as were others, such as the physician genius Francis Xavier Bichat of the Hotel Dieu."[9] However, "Bichat moved from the tendency typical of the French vitalistic tradition to progressively free himself from metaphysics in order to combine with hypotheses and theories which accorded to the scientific criteria of physics and chemistry."[11] John Hunter recognised "a 'living principle' in addition to mechanics."[9]

Johann Friedrich Blumenbach was influential in establishing epigenesis in the life sciences in 1781 with his publication of Über den Bildungstrieb und das Zeugungsgeschäfte. Blumenbach cut up freshwater Hydra and established that the removed parts would regenerate. He inferred the presence of a "formative drive" (Bildungstrieb) in living matter. But he pointed out that this name,

like names applied to every other kind of vital power, of itself, explains nothing: it serves merely to designate a peculiar power formed by the combination of the mechanical principle with that which is susceptible of modification.

19th century edit

 
The synthesis of urea in the early 19th century from inorganic compounds was counterevidence for the vitalist hypothesis that only organisms could make the components of living things.

Jöns Jakob Berzelius, one of the early 19th century founders of modern chemistry, argued that a regulative force must exist within living matter to maintain its functions.[10] Berzelius contended that compounds could be distinguished by whether they required any organisms in their synthesis (organic compounds) or whether they did not (inorganic compounds).[12] Vitalist chemists predicted that organic materials could not be synthesized from inorganic components, but Friedrich Wöhler synthesised urea from inorganic components in 1828.[13] However, contemporary accounts do not support the common belief that vitalism died when Wöhler made urea. This Wöhler Myth, as historian Peter Ramberg called it, originated from a popular history of chemistry published in 1931, which, "ignoring all pretense of historical accuracy, turned Wöhler into a crusader who made attempt after attempt to synthesize a natural product that would refute vitalism and lift the veil of ignorance, until 'one afternoon the miracle happened'".[14][15][b]

Between 1833 and 1844, Johannes Peter Müller wrote a book on physiology called Handbuch der Physiologie, which became the leading textbook in the field for much of the nineteenth century. The book showed Müller's commitments to vitalism; he questioned why organic matter differs from inorganic, then proceeded to chemical analyses of the blood and lymph. He describes in detail the circulatory, lymphatic, respiratory, digestive, endocrine, nervous, and sensory systems in a wide variety of animals but explains that the presence of a soul makes each organism an indivisible whole. He claimed that the behaviour of light and sound waves showed that living organisms possessed a life-energy for which physical laws could never fully account.[16]

 
Louis Pasteur argued that only life could catalyse fermentation. Painting by Albert Edelfelt, 1885

Louis Pasteur (1822–1895) after his famous rebuttal of spontaneous generation, performed several experiments that he felt supported vitalism. According to Bechtel, Pasteur "fitted fermentation into a more general programme describing special reactions that only occur in living organisms. These are irreducibly vital phenomena." Rejecting the claims of Berzelius, Liebig, Traube and others that fermentation resulted from chemical agents or catalysts within cells, Pasteur concluded that fermentation was a "vital action".[1]

20th century edit

Hans Driesch (1867–1941) interpreted his experiments as showing that life is not run by physicochemical laws.[5] His main argument was that when one cuts up an embryo after its first division or two, each part grows into a complete adult. Driesch's reputation as an experimental biologist deteriorated as a result of his vitalistic theories, which scientists have seen since his time as pseudoscience.[5][6] Vitalism is a superseded scientific hypothesis, and the term is sometimes used as a pejorative epithet.[17] Ernst Mayr (1904–2005) wrote:

It would be ahistorical to ridicule vitalists. When one reads the writings of one of the leading vitalists like Driesch one is forced to agree with him that many of the basic problems of biology simply cannot be solved by a philosophy as that of Descartes, in which the organism is simply considered a machine... The logic of the critique of the vitalists was impeccable.[18]

Vitalism has become so disreputable a belief in the last fifty years that no biologist alive today would want to be classified as a vitalist. Still, the remnants of vitalist thinking can be found in the work of Alistair Hardy, Sewall Wright, and Charles Birch, who seem to believe in some sort of nonmaterial principle in organisms.[19]

Other vitalists included Johannes Reinke and Oscar Hertwig. Reinke used the word neovitalism to describe his work, claiming that it would eventually be verified through experimentation, and that it was an improvement over the other vitalistic theories. The work of Reinke influenced Carl Jung.[20]

John Scott Haldane adopted an anti-mechanist approach to biology and an idealist philosophy early on in his career. Haldane saw his work as a vindication of his belief that teleology was an essential concept in biology. His views became widely known with his first book Mechanism, life and personality in 1913.[21] Haldane borrowed arguments from the vitalists to use against mechanism; however, he was not a vitalist. Haldane treated the organism as fundamental to biology: "we perceive the organism as a self-regulating entity", "every effort to analyze it into components that can be reduced to a mechanical explanation violates this central experience".[21] The work of Haldane was an influence on organicism. Haldane stated that a purely mechanist interpretation could not account for the characteristics of life. Haldane wrote a number of books in which he attempted to show the invalidity of both vitalism and mechanist approaches to science. Haldane explained:

We must find a different theoretical basis of biology, based on the observation that all the phenomena concerned tend towards being so coordinated that they express what is normal for an adult organism.

— [22]

By 1931, biologists had "almost unanimously abandoned vitalism as an acknowledged belief."[22]

Emergentism edit

Contemporary science and engineering sometimes describe emergent processes, in which the properties of a system cannot be fully described in terms of the properties of the constituents.[23][24] This may be because the properties of the constituents are not fully understood, or because the interactions between the individual constituents are important for the behavior of the system.

Whether emergence should be grouped with traditional vitalist concepts is a matter of semantic controversy.[c] According to Emmeche et al. (1997):

On the one hand, many scientists and philosophers regard emergence as having only a pseudo-scientific status. On the other hand, new developments in physics, biology, psychology, and cross-disciplinary fields such as cognitive science, artificial life, and the study of non-linear dynamical systems have focused strongly on the high level 'collective behaviour' of complex systems, which is often said to be truly emergent, and the term is increasingly used to characterize such systems.

— [27]

Mesmerism edit

 
Franz Mesmer proposed the vitalist force of magnétisme animal in animals with breath.

A popular vitalist theory of the 18th century was "animal magnetism", in the theories of Franz Mesmer (1734–1815). However, the use of the (conventional) English term animal magnetism to translate Mesmer's magnétisme animal can be misleading for three reasons:

  • Mesmer chose his term to clearly distinguish his variant of magnetic force from those referred to, at that time, as mineral magnetism, cosmic magnetism and planetary magnetism.
  • Mesmer felt that this particular force/power only resided in the bodies of humans and animals.
  • Mesmer chose the word "animal," for its root meaning (from Latin animus="breath") specifically to identify his force as a quality that belonged to all creatures with breath; viz., the animate beings: humans and animals.

Mesmer's ideas became so influential that King Louis XVI of France appointed two commissions to investigate mesmerism; one was led by Joseph-Ignace Guillotin, the other, led by Benjamin Franklin, included Bailly and Lavoisier. The commissioners learned about Mesmeric theory, and saw its patients fall into fits and trances. In Franklin's garden, a patient was led to each of five trees, one of which had been "mesmerized"; he hugged each in turn to receive the "vital fluid," but fainted at the foot of a 'wrong' one. At Lavoisier's house, four normal cups of water were held before a "sensitive" woman; the fourth produced convulsions, but she calmly swallowed the mesmerized contents of a fifth, believing it to be plain water. The commissioners concluded that "the fluid without imagination is powerless, whereas imagination without the fluid can produce the effects of the fluid."[28]

Medical philosophies edit

Vitalism has a long history in medical philosophies: many traditional healing practices posited that disease results from some imbalance in vital forces. In the Western tradition founded by Hippocrates, these vital forces were associated with the four temperaments and humours; Eastern traditions posited an imbalance or blocking of qi or prana. One example of a similar notion in Africa is the Yoruba concept of ase. Today forms of vitalism continue to exist as philosophical positions or as tenets in some religious traditions.[citation needed]

Complementary and alternative medicine therapies include energy therapies,[29] associated with vitalism, especially biofield therapies such as therapeutic touch, Reiki, external qi, chakra healing and SHEN therapy.[30] In these therapies, the "subtle energy" field of a patient is manipulated by a practitioner. The subtle energy is held to exist beyond the electromagnetic energy produced by the heart and brain. Beverly Rubik describes the biofield as a "complex, dynamic, extremely weak EM field within and around the human body...."[30]

The founder of homeopathy, Samuel Hahnemann, promoted an immaterial, vitalistic view of disease: "...they are solely spirit-like (dynamic) derangements of the spirit-like power (the vital principle) that animates the human body." The view of disease as a dynamic disturbance of the immaterial and dynamic vital force is taught in many homeopathic colleges and constitutes a fundamental principle for many contemporary practising homeopaths.[citation needed]

Criticism edit

 
The 17th century French playwright Molière mocked vitalism in his 1673 play Le Malade imaginaire.

Vitalism has sometimes been criticized as begging the question by inventing a name. Molière had famously parodied this fallacy in Le Malade imaginaire, where a quack "answers" the question of "Why does opium cause sleep?" with "Because of its dormitive virtue (i.e., soporific power)."[31] Thomas Henry Huxley compared vitalism to stating that water is the way it is because of its "aquosity".[32] His grandson Julian Huxley in 1926 compared "vital force" or élan vital to explaining a railroad locomotive's operation by its élan locomotif ("locomotive force").

Another criticism is that vitalists have failed to rule out mechanistic explanations. This is rather obvious in retrospect for organic chemistry and developmental biology, but the criticism goes back at least a century. In 1912, Jacques Loeb published The Mechanistic Conception of Life, in which he described experiments on how a sea urchin could have a pin for its father, as Bertrand Russell put it (Religion and Science). He offered this challenge:

"... we must either succeed in producing living matter artificially, or we must find the reasons why this is impossible." (pp. 5–6)

Loeb addressed vitalism more explicitly:

"It is, therefore, unwarranted to continue the statement that in addition to the acceleration of oxidations the beginning of individual life is determined by the entrance of a metaphysical "life principle" into the egg; and that death is determined, aside from the cessation of oxidations, by the departure of this "principle" from the body. In the case of the evaporation of water we are satisfied with the explanation given by the kinetic theory of gases and do not demand that to repeat a well-known jest of Huxley the disappearance of the "aquosity" be also taken into consideration." (pp. 14–15)

Bechtel states that vitalism "is often viewed as unfalsifiable, and therefore a pernicious metaphysical doctrine."[1] For many scientists, "vitalist" theories were unsatisfactory "holding positions" on the pathway to mechanistic understanding. In 1967, Francis Crick, the co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, stated "And so to those of you who may be vitalists I would make this prophecy: what everyone believed yesterday, and you believe today, only cranks will believe tomorrow."[33]

While many vitalistic theories have in fact been falsified, notably Mesmerism, the pseudoscientific retention of untested and untestable theories continues to this day. Alan Sokal published an analysis of the wide acceptance among professional nurses of "scientific theories" of spiritual healing. (Pseudoscience and Postmodernism: Antagonists or Fellow-Travelers?).[34] Use of a technique called therapeutic touch was especially reviewed by Sokal, who concluded, "nearly all the pseudoscientific systems to be examined in this essay are based philosophically on vitalism" and added that "Mainstream science has rejected vitalism since at least the 1930s, for a plethora of good reasons that have only become stronger with time."[34]

Joseph C. Keating, Jr.[35] discusses vitalism's past and present roles in chiropractic and calls vitalism "a form of bio-theology." He further explains that:

"Vitalism is that rejected tradition in biology which proposes that life is sustained and explained by an unmeasurable, intelligent force or energy. The supposed effects of vitalism are the manifestations of life itself, which in turn are the basis for inferring the concept in the first place. This circular reasoning offers pseudo-explanation, and may deceive us into believing we have explained some aspect of biology when in fact we have only labeled our ignorance. 'Explaining an unknown (life) with an unknowable (Innate),' suggests chiropractor Joseph Donahue, 'is absurd'."[36]

Keating views vitalism as incompatible with scientific thinking:

"Chiropractors are not unique in recognizing a tendency and capacity for self-repair and auto-regulation of human physiology. But we surely stick out like a sore thumb among professions which claim to be scientifically based by our unrelenting commitment to vitalism. So long as we propound the 'One cause, one cure' rhetoric of Innate, we should expect to be met by ridicule from the wider health science community. Chiropractors can't have it both ways. Our theories cannot be both dogmatically held vitalistic constructs and be scientific at the same time. The purposiveness, consciousness and rigidity of the Palmers' Innate should be rejected."[36]

Keating also mentions Skinner's viewpoint:

"Vitalism has many faces and has sprung up in many areas of scientific inquiry. Psychologist B.F. Skinner, for example, pointed out the irrationality of attributing behavior to mental states and traits. Such 'mental way stations,' he argued, amount to excess theoretical baggage which fails to advance cause-and-effect explanations by substituting an unfathomable psychology of 'mind'."[36]

According to Williams, "[t]oday, vitalism is one of the ideas that form the basis for many pseudoscientific health systems that claim that illnesses are caused by a disturbance or imbalance of the body's vital force."[37] "Vitalists claim to be scientific, but in fact they reject the scientific method with its basic postulates of cause and effect and of provability. They often regard subjective experience to be more valid than objective material reality."[37]

Victor Stenger[38] states that the term "bioenergetics" "is applied in biochemistry to refer to the readily measurable exchanges of energy within organisms, and between organisms and the environment, which occur by normal physical and chemical processes. This is not, however, what the new vitalists have in mind. They imagine the bioenergetic field as a holistic living force that goes beyond reductionist physics and chemistry."[39]

Such a field is sometimes explained as electromagnetic, though some advocates also make confused appeals to quantum physics.[30] Joanne Stefanatos states that "The principles of energy medicine originate in quantum physics."[40] Stenger[39] offers several explanations as to why this line of reasoning may be misplaced. He explains that energy exists in discrete packets called quanta. Energy fields are composed of their component parts and so only exist when quanta are present. Therefore, energy fields are not holistic, but are rather a system of discrete parts that must obey the laws of physics. This also means that energy fields are not instantaneous. These facts of quantum physics place limitations on the infinite, continuous field that is used by some theorists to describe so-called "human energy fields".[41] Stenger continues, explaining that the effects of EM forces have been measured by physicists as accurately as one part in a billion and there is yet to be any evidence that living organisms emit a unique field.[39]

Vitalistic thinking has been identified in the naive biological theories of children: "Recent experimental results show that a majority of preschoolers tend to choose vitalistic explanations as most plausible. Vitalism, together with other forms of intermediate causality, constitute unique causal devices for naive biology as a core domain of thought."[42]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stéphane Leduc and D'Arcy Thompson (On Growth and Form) published a series of works that in Evelyn Fox Keller's view took on the task of uprooting the remaining vestiges of vitalism, essentially by showing that the principles of physics and chemistry were enough, by themselves, to account for the growth and development of biological form.[2] On the other hand, Michael Ruse notes that D'Arcy Thompson's avoidance of natural selection had an "odor of spirit forces" about it.[3]
  2. ^ In 1845, Adolph Kolbe succeeded in making acetic acid from inorganic compounds, and in the 1850s, Marcellin Berthelot repeated this feat for numerous organic compounds. In retrospect, Wöhler's work was the beginning of the end of Berzelius's vitalist hypothesis, but only in retrospect, as Ramberg had shown.
  3. ^ See;[25] briefly, some philosophers see emergentism as midway between traditional spiritual vitalism and mechanistic reductionism; others argue that, structurally, emergentism is equivalent to vitalism. See also.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Bechtel, William; Williamson, Robert C. (1998). "Vitalism". In E. Craig (ed.). Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Evelyn Fox Keller, Making Sense of Life Explaining Biological Development with Models, Metaphors, and Machines. Harvard University Press, 2002.
  3. ^ Ruse, Michael (2013). "17. From Organicism to Mechanism-and Halfway Back?". In Henning, Brian G.; Scarfe, Adam (eds.). Beyond Mechanism: Putting Life Back Into Biology. Lexington Books. p. 419. ISBN 9780739174371.
  4. ^ Williams, Elizabeth Ann (2003). A Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier. Ashgate. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-7546-0881-3.
  5. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on October 31, 2006.
  6. ^ a b Sebastian Normandin; Charles T. Wolfe (2013). Introduction. Springer. p. 104. ISBN 978-94-007-2445-7. In medicine and biology, vitalism has been seen as a philosophically-charged term, a pseudoscientific gloss that corrupted scientific practice … {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Jidenu, Paulin (1996) African Philosophy, 2nd Ed. Indiana University Press, ISBN 0-253-21096-8, p.16.
  8. ^ Birch & Cobb 1985, p. 75
  9. ^ a b c d Birch & Cobb 1985, pp. 76–78
  10. ^ a b Ede, Andrew. (2007) The Rise and Decline of Colloid Science in North America, 1900–1935: The Neglected Dimension, p. 23
  11. ^ History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences, p. 238
  12. ^ Wilkinson, Ian (10 June 2002). "History of Clinical Chemistry". EJIFCC. 13 (4): 114–118. ISSN 1650-3414. PMC 6208063.
  13. ^ Kinne-Saffran, E.; Kinne, R. K. H. (August 7, 1999). "Vitalism and Synthesis of Urea". American Journal of Nephrology. 19 (2): 290–294. doi:10.1159/000013463. PMID 10213830. S2CID 71727190 – via www.karger.com.
  14. ^ Ramberg, Peter J. (2000). "The Death of Vitalism and the Birth of Organic Chemistry: Wohler's Urea Synthesis and the Disciplinary Identity of Organic Chemistry". Ambix. 47 (3): 170–195. doi:10.1179/amb.2000.47.3.170. PMID 11640223. S2CID 44613876.
  15. ^ Schummer, Joachim (December 2003). "The notion of nature in chemistry" (PDF). Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. 34 (4): 705–736. doi:10.1016/S0039-3681(03)00050-5.
  16. ^ Otis, Laura (October 2004). "Johannes Peter Müller (1801-1858)" (PDF). Virtual Laboratory: Essays and Resources on the Experimentalization of Life (Max Planck Institute).
  17. ^ Galatzer-Levy, R. M. (August 7, 1976). "Psychic Energy: A Historical Perspective". Ann. Psychoanal. 4: 41–61 – via PEP Web.
  18. ^ Mayr, Ernst (2002). . Archived from the original on 2006-09-26. Retrieved 2006-09-24.
  19. ^ Ernst Mayr Toward a new philosophy of biology: observations of an evolutionist 1988, p. 13. ISBN 978-0674896666.
  20. ^ Noll, Richard. "Jung's concept of die Dominanten (the Dominants) (1997)" – via www.academia.edu. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  21. ^ a b Bowler, Peter J. Reconciling science and religion: the debate in early-twentieth-century Britain, 2001, pp. 168–169. ISBN 978-0226068589.
  22. ^ a b Mayr, Ernst (2010). "The Decline of Vitalism". In Bedau, Mark A.; Cleland, Carol E. (eds.). The Nature of Life: Classical and Contemporary Perspectives from Philosophy and Science. Cambridge University Press. pp. 93–95. ISBN 9781139488655. Yet considering how dominant vitalism was in biology and for how long a period it prevailed, it is surprising how rapidly and completely it collapsed. The last support of vitalism as a viable concept in biology disappeared about 1930." (p. 94) From p. 95: "Vitalism survived even longer in the writings of philosophers than it did in the writings of physicists. But so far as I know, there are no vitalists among the philosophers of biology who started publishing after 1965. Nor do I know of a single reputable living biologist who still supports straightforward vitalism. The few late twentieth-century biologists with vitalist leanings (A. Hardy, S. Wright, A. Portmann) are no longer alive.
  23. ^ Schultz, S.G. (1998). "A century of (epithelial) transport physiology: from vitalism to molecular cloning". The American Journal of Physiology. 274 (1 Pt 1): C13–23. doi:10.1152/ajpcell.1998.274.1.C13. PMID 9458708.
  24. ^ Gilbert, S.F.; Sarkar, S. (2000). "Embracing complexity: organicism for the 21st century". Developmental Dynamics. 219 (1): 1–9. doi:10.1002/1097-0177(2000)9999:9999<::AID-DVDY1036>3.0.CO;2-A. PMID 10974666.
  25. ^ O’Connor, Timothy (2021). "Emergent Properties". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.
  26. ^ Emmeche, C (16 July 2001). "Does a robot have an Umwelt? Reflections on the qualitative biosemiotics of Jakob von Uexküll" (PDF). Semiotica. 2001 (134): 653–693. doi:10.1515/semi.2001.048.
  27. ^ Emmeche, C. (1997) Explaining Emergence: towards an ontology of levels. Journal for General Philosophy of Science available online 2006-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Best, M.; Neuhauser, D.; Slavin, L. (2003). "Evaluating Mesmerism, Paris, 1784: the controversy over the blinded placebo controlled trials has not stopped". Quality & Safety in Health Care. 12 (3): 232–3. doi:10.1136/qhc.12.3.232. PMC 1743715. PMID 12792017.
  29. ^ "Complementary and Alternative Medicine – U.S. National Library of Medicine Collection Development Manual". Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  30. ^ a b c Rubik, Beverly. . American Medical Student Association Foundation. Archived from the original on 2006-02-14. Retrieved 8 November 2006.
  31. ^ Mihi a docto doctore / Demandatur causam et rationem quare / Opium facit dormire. / A quoi respondeo, / Quia est in eo / Vertus dormitiva, / Cujus est natura / Sensus assoupire. Le Malade imaginaire, (French Wikisource)
  32. ^ The Physical Basis of Life, Pall Mall Gazette, 1869
  33. ^ Crick, Francis (1967) Of Molecules and Men; Great Minds Series Prometheus Books 2004, reviewed here. Crick's remark is cited and discussed in: Hein H (2004) Molecular biology vs. organicism: The enduring dispute between mechanism and vitalism. Synthese 20:238–253, who describes Crick's remark as "raising spectral red herrings".
  34. ^ a b Pseudoscience and Postmodernism: Antagonists or Fellow-Travelers? (pdf)
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on May 25, 2006.
  36. ^ a b c Keating, Joseph C. (2002), "The Meanings of Innate", The Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association, 46 (1): 4–10, PMC 2505097
  37. ^ a b Williams, William F., ed. (2013). "Vitalism". Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience: From Alien Abductions to Zone Therapy (revised ed.). p. 367. ISBN 9781135955229. VITALISM – The concept that bodily functions are due to a 'vital principle' or 'life force' that is distinct from the physical forces explainable by the laws of chemistry and physics. Many alternative approaches to modern medicine are rooted in vitalism. ... The exact nature of the vital force was debated by early philosophers, but vitalism in one form or another remained the preferred thinking behind most science and medicine until 1828. That year, German scientist Friedrich Wöhler (1800–82) synthesized an organic compound from an inorganic substance, a process that vitalists considered to be impossible. ... Vitalists claim to be scientific, but in fact they reject the scientific method with its basic postulates of cause and effect and of provability. They often regard subjective experience to be more valid than objective material reality. Today, vitalism is one of the ideas that form the basis for many pseudoscientific health systems that claim that illnesses are caused by a disturbance or imbalance of the body's vital force.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.
  39. ^ a b c Stenger, Victor J. (Spring–Summer 1999). . The Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine. 3 (1). Archived from the original on 2006-12-18. Retrieved 2006-12-03.
  40. ^ Stefanatos, J. 1997, Introduction to Bioenergetic Medicine, Shoen, A.M. and S.G. Wynn, Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine: Principles and Practices, Mosby-Yearbook, Chicago.
  41. ^ Biley, Francis C. 2005, Unitary Health Care: Martha Rogers' Science of Unitary Human Beings, University of Wales College of Medicine, viewed 30 November 2006, . Archived from the original on 2006-12-05. Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  42. ^ Inagaki, K.; Hatano, G. (2004). "'Vitalistic causality in young children's naive biology.'". Trends Cogn Sci. 8 (8): 356–62. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2004.06.004. PMID 15335462. S2CID 29256474.

Sources edit

  • Birch, Charles; Cobb, John B (1985). The Liberation of Life: From the Cell to the Community. CUP Archive. ISBN 9780521315142.
  • History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences. Vol. 29. 2007.

External links edit

  • For vital force and vitalism in the Spanish context, see Nicolás Fernández-Medina's Life Embodied: The Promise of Vital Force in Spanish Modernity (McGill-Queen's UP, 2018).

vitalism, this, article, about, mechanist, philosophy, jain, philosophical, concept, jainism, other, uses, vital, disambiguation, belief, that, starts, from, premise, that, living, organisms, fundamentally, different, from, living, entities, because, they, con. This article is about the non mechanist philosophy For the Jain philosophical concept see Vitalism Jainism For other uses see Vital disambiguation Vitalism is a belief that starts from the premise that living organisms are fundamentally different from non living entities because they contain some non physical element or are governed by different principles than are inanimate things 1 a Where vitalism explicitly invokes a vital principle that element is often referred to as the vital spark energy elan vital coined by vitalist Henri Bergson vital force or vis vitalis which some equate with the soul In the 18th and 19th centuries vitalism was discussed among biologists between those who felt that the known mechanics of physics would eventually explain the difference between life and non life and vitalists who argued that the processes of life could not be reduced to a mechanistic process Vitalist biologists such as Johannes Reinke proposed testable hypotheses meant to show inadequacies with mechanistic explanations but their experiments failed to provide support for vitalism Biologists now consider vitalism in this sense to have been refuted by empirical evidence and hence regard it either as a superseded scientific theory 4 or since the mid 20th century as a pseudoscience 5 6 Vitalism has a long history in medical philosophies many traditional healing practices posited that disease results from some imbalance in vital forces Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient times 1 2 Medieval 1 3 Early modern 1 4 19th century 1 5 20th century 2 Emergentism 3 Mesmerism 4 Medical philosophies 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksHistory editAncient times edit The notion that bodily functions are due to a vitalistic principle existing in all living creatures has roots going back at least to ancient Egypt 7 In Greek philosophy the Milesian school proposed natural explanations deduced from materialism and mechanism However by the time of Lucretius this account was supplemented for example by the unpredictable clinamen of Epicurus and in Stoic physics the pneuma assumed the role of logos Galen believed the lungs draw pneuma from the air which the blood communicates throughout the body 8 Medieval edit In Europe medieval physics was influenced by the idea of pneuma helping to shape later aether theories Early modern edit Vitalists included English anatomist Francis Glisson 1597 1677 and the Italian doctor Marcello Malpighi 1628 1694 9 Caspar Friedrich Wolff 1733 1794 is considered to be the father of epigenesis in embryology that is he marks the point when embryonic development began to be described in terms of the proliferation of cells rather than the incarnation of a preformed soul However this degree of empirical observation was not matched by a mechanistic philosophy in his Theoria Generationis 1759 he tried to explain the emergence of the organism by the actions of a vis essentialis an organizing formative force Carl Reichenbach 1788 1869 later developed the theory of Odic force a form of life energy that permeates living things In the 17th century modern science responded to Newton s action at a distance and the mechanism of Cartesian dualism with vitalist theories that whereas the chemical transformations undergone by non living substances are reversible so called organic matter is permanently altered by chemical transformations such as cooking 10 As worded by Charles Birch and John B Cobb the claims of the vitalists came to the fore again in the 18th century 9 Georg Ernst Stahl s followers were active as were others such as the physician genius Francis Xavier Bichat of the Hotel Dieu 9 However Bichat moved from the tendency typical of the French vitalistic tradition to progressively free himself from metaphysics in order to combine with hypotheses and theories which accorded to the scientific criteria of physics and chemistry 11 John Hunter recognised a living principle in addition to mechanics 9 Johann Friedrich Blumenbach was influential in establishing epigenesis in the life sciences in 1781 with his publication of Uber den Bildungstrieb und das Zeugungsgeschafte Blumenbach cut up freshwater Hydra and established that the removed parts would regenerate He inferred the presence of a formative drive Bildungstrieb in living matter But he pointed out that this name like names applied to every other kind of vital power of itself explains nothing it serves merely to designate a peculiar power formed by the combination of the mechanical principle with that which is susceptible of modification 19th century edit Further information Alternatives to Darwinism nbsp The synthesis of urea in the early 19th century from inorganic compounds was counterevidence for the vitalist hypothesis that only organisms could make the components of living things Jons Jakob Berzelius one of the early 19th century founders of modern chemistry argued that a regulative force must exist within living matter to maintain its functions 10 Berzelius contended that compounds could be distinguished by whether they required any organisms in their synthesis organic compounds or whether they did not inorganic compounds 12 Vitalist chemists predicted that organic materials could not be synthesized from inorganic components but Friedrich Wohler synthesised urea from inorganic components in 1828 13 However contemporary accounts do not support the common belief that vitalism died when Wohler made urea This Wohler Myth as historian Peter Ramberg called it originated from a popular history of chemistry published in 1931 which ignoring all pretense of historical accuracy turned Wohler into a crusader who made attempt after attempt to synthesize a natural product that would refute vitalism and lift the veil of ignorance until one afternoon the miracle happened 14 15 b Between 1833 and 1844 Johannes Peter Muller wrote a book on physiology called Handbuch der Physiologie which became the leading textbook in the field for much of the nineteenth century The book showed Muller s commitments to vitalism he questioned why organic matter differs from inorganic then proceeded to chemical analyses of the blood and lymph He describes in detail the circulatory lymphatic respiratory digestive endocrine nervous and sensory systems in a wide variety of animals but explains that the presence of a soul makes each organism an indivisible whole He claimed that the behaviour of light and sound waves showed that living organisms possessed a life energy for which physical laws could never fully account 16 nbsp Louis Pasteur argued that only life could catalyse fermentation Painting by Albert Edelfelt 1885Louis Pasteur 1822 1895 after his famous rebuttal of spontaneous generation performed several experiments that he felt supported vitalism According to Bechtel Pasteur fitted fermentation into a more general programme describing special reactions that only occur in living organisms These are irreducibly vital phenomena Rejecting the claims of Berzelius Liebig Traube and others that fermentation resulted from chemical agents or catalysts within cells Pasteur concluded that fermentation was a vital action 1 20th century edit Hans Driesch 1867 1941 interpreted his experiments as showing that life is not run by physicochemical laws 5 His main argument was that when one cuts up an embryo after its first division or two each part grows into a complete adult Driesch s reputation as an experimental biologist deteriorated as a result of his vitalistic theories which scientists have seen since his time as pseudoscience 5 6 Vitalism is a superseded scientific hypothesis and the term is sometimes used as a pejorative epithet 17 Ernst Mayr 1904 2005 wrote It would be ahistorical to ridicule vitalists When one reads the writings of one of the leading vitalists like Driesch one is forced to agree with him that many of the basic problems of biology simply cannot be solved by a philosophy as that of Descartes in which the organism is simply considered a machine The logic of the critique of the vitalists was impeccable 18 Vitalism has become so disreputable a belief in the last fifty years that no biologist alive today would want to be classified as a vitalist Still the remnants of vitalist thinking can be found in the work of Alistair Hardy Sewall Wright and Charles Birch who seem to believe in some sort of nonmaterial principle in organisms 19 Other vitalists included Johannes Reinke and Oscar Hertwig Reinke used the word neovitalism to describe his work claiming that it would eventually be verified through experimentation and that it was an improvement over the other vitalistic theories The work of Reinke influenced Carl Jung 20 John Scott Haldane adopted an anti mechanist approach to biology and an idealist philosophy early on in his career Haldane saw his work as a vindication of his belief that teleology was an essential concept in biology His views became widely known with his first book Mechanism life and personality in 1913 21 Haldane borrowed arguments from the vitalists to use against mechanism however he was not a vitalist Haldane treated the organism as fundamental to biology we perceive the organism as a self regulating entity every effort to analyze it into components that can be reduced to a mechanical explanation violates this central experience 21 The work of Haldane was an influence on organicism Haldane stated that a purely mechanist interpretation could not account for the characteristics of life Haldane wrote a number of books in which he attempted to show the invalidity of both vitalism and mechanist approaches to science Haldane explained We must find a different theoretical basis of biology based on the observation that all the phenomena concerned tend towards being so coordinated that they express what is normal for an adult organism 22 By 1931 biologists had almost unanimously abandoned vitalism as an acknowledged belief 22 Emergentism editMain article Emergentism Contemporary science and engineering sometimes describe emergent processes in which the properties of a system cannot be fully described in terms of the properties of the constituents 23 24 This may be because the properties of the constituents are not fully understood or because the interactions between the individual constituents are important for the behavior of the system Whether emergence should be grouped with traditional vitalist concepts is a matter of semantic controversy c According to Emmeche et al 1997 On the one hand many scientists and philosophers regard emergence as having only a pseudo scientific status On the other hand new developments in physics biology psychology and cross disciplinary fields such as cognitive science artificial life and the study of non linear dynamical systems have focused strongly on the high level collective behaviour of complex systems which is often said to be truly emergent and the term is increasingly used to characterize such systems 27 Mesmerism editMain article Animal magnetism nbsp Franz Mesmer proposed the vitalist force of magnetisme animal in animals with breath A popular vitalist theory of the 18th century was animal magnetism in the theories of Franz Mesmer 1734 1815 However the use of the conventional English term animal magnetism to translate Mesmer s magnetisme animal can be misleading for three reasons Mesmer chose his term to clearly distinguish his variant of magnetic force from those referred to at that time as mineral magnetism cosmic magnetism and planetary magnetism Mesmer felt that this particular force power only resided in the bodies of humans and animals Mesmer chose the word animal for its root meaning from Latin animus breath specifically to identify his force as a quality that belonged to all creatures with breath viz the animate beings humans and animals Mesmer s ideas became so influential that King Louis XVI of France appointed two commissions to investigate mesmerism one was led by Joseph Ignace Guillotin the other led by Benjamin Franklin included Bailly and Lavoisier The commissioners learned about Mesmeric theory and saw its patients fall into fits and trances In Franklin s garden a patient was led to each of five trees one of which had been mesmerized he hugged each in turn to receive the vital fluid but fainted at the foot of a wrong one At Lavoisier s house four normal cups of water were held before a sensitive woman the fourth produced convulsions but she calmly swallowed the mesmerized contents of a fifth believing it to be plain water The commissioners concluded that the fluid without imagination is powerless whereas imagination without the fluid can produce the effects of the fluid 28 Medical philosophies editVitalism has a long history in medical philosophies many traditional healing practices posited that disease results from some imbalance in vital forces In the Western tradition founded by Hippocrates these vital forces were associated with the four temperaments and humours Eastern traditions posited an imbalance or blocking of qi or prana One example of a similar notion in Africa is the Yoruba concept of ase Today forms of vitalism continue to exist as philosophical positions or as tenets in some religious traditions citation needed Complementary and alternative medicine therapies include energy therapies 29 associated with vitalism especially biofield therapies such as therapeutic touch Reiki external qi chakra healing and SHEN therapy 30 In these therapies the subtle energy field of a patient is manipulated by a practitioner The subtle energy is held to exist beyond the electromagnetic energy produced by the heart and brain Beverly Rubik describes the biofield as a complex dynamic extremely weak EM field within and around the human body 30 The founder of homeopathy Samuel Hahnemann promoted an immaterial vitalistic view of disease they are solely spirit like dynamic derangements of the spirit like power the vital principle that animates the human body The view of disease as a dynamic disturbance of the immaterial and dynamic vital force is taught in many homeopathic colleges and constitutes a fundamental principle for many contemporary practising homeopaths citation needed Criticism edit nbsp The 17th century French playwright Moliere mocked vitalism in his 1673 play Le Malade imaginaire Vitalism has sometimes been criticized as begging the question by inventing a name Moliere had famously parodied this fallacy in Le Malade imaginaire where a quack answers the question of Why does opium cause sleep with Because of its dormitive virtue i e soporific power 31 Thomas Henry Huxley compared vitalism to stating that water is the way it is because of its aquosity 32 His grandson Julian Huxley in 1926 compared vital force or elan vital to explaining a railroad locomotive s operation by its elan locomotif locomotive force Another criticism is that vitalists have failed to rule out mechanistic explanations This is rather obvious in retrospect for organic chemistry and developmental biology but the criticism goes back at least a century In 1912 Jacques Loeb published The Mechanistic Conception of Life in which he described experiments on how a sea urchin could have a pin for its father as Bertrand Russell put it Religion and Science He offered this challenge we must either succeed in producing living matter artificially or we must find the reasons why this is impossible pp 5 6 Loeb addressed vitalism more explicitly It is therefore unwarranted to continue the statement that in addition to the acceleration of oxidations the beginning of individual life is determined by the entrance of a metaphysical life principle into the egg and that death is determined aside from the cessation of oxidations by the departure of this principle from the body In the case of the evaporation of water we are satisfied with the explanation given by the kinetic theory of gases and do not demand that to repeat a well known jest of Huxley the disappearance of the aquosity be also taken into consideration pp 14 15 Bechtel states that vitalism is often viewed as unfalsifiable and therefore a pernicious metaphysical doctrine 1 For many scientists vitalist theories were unsatisfactory holding positions on the pathway to mechanistic understanding In 1967 Francis Crick the co discoverer of the structure of DNA stated And so to those of you who may be vitalists I would make this prophecy what everyone believed yesterday and you believe today only cranks will believe tomorrow 33 While many vitalistic theories have in fact been falsified notably Mesmerism the pseudoscientific retention of untested and untestable theories continues to this day Alan Sokal published an analysis of the wide acceptance among professional nurses of scientific theories of spiritual healing Pseudoscience and Postmodernism Antagonists or Fellow Travelers 34 Use of a technique called therapeutic touch was especially reviewed by Sokal who concluded nearly all the pseudoscientific systems to be examined in this essay are based philosophically on vitalism and added that Mainstream science has rejected vitalism since at least the 1930s for a plethora of good reasons that have only become stronger with time 34 Joseph C Keating Jr 35 discusses vitalism s past and present roles in chiropractic and calls vitalism a form of bio theology He further explains that Vitalism is that rejected tradition in biology which proposes that life is sustained and explained by an unmeasurable intelligent force or energy The supposed effects of vitalism are the manifestations of life itself which in turn are the basis for inferring the concept in the first place This circular reasoning offers pseudo explanation and may deceive us into believing we have explained some aspect of biology when in fact we have only labeled our ignorance Explaining an unknown life with an unknowable Innate suggests chiropractor Joseph Donahue is absurd 36 Keating views vitalism as incompatible with scientific thinking Chiropractors are not unique in recognizing a tendency and capacity for self repair and auto regulation of human physiology But we surely stick out like a sore thumb among professions which claim to be scientifically based by our unrelenting commitment to vitalism So long as we propound the One cause one cure rhetoric of Innate we should expect to be met by ridicule from the wider health science community Chiropractors can t have it both ways Our theories cannot be both dogmatically held vitalistic constructs and be scientific at the same time The purposiveness consciousness and rigidity of the Palmers Innate should be rejected 36 Keating also mentions Skinner s viewpoint Vitalism has many faces and has sprung up in many areas of scientific inquiry Psychologist B F Skinner for example pointed out the irrationality of attributing behavior to mental states and traits Such mental way stations he argued amount to excess theoretical baggage which fails to advance cause and effect explanations by substituting an unfathomable psychology of mind 36 According to Williams t oday vitalism is one of the ideas that form the basis for many pseudoscientific health systems that claim that illnesses are caused by a disturbance or imbalance of the body s vital force 37 Vitalists claim to be scientific but in fact they reject the scientific method with its basic postulates of cause and effect and of provability They often regard subjective experience to be more valid than objective material reality 37 Victor Stenger 38 states that the term bioenergetics is applied in biochemistry to refer to the readily measurable exchanges of energy within organisms and between organisms and the environment which occur by normal physical and chemical processes This is not however what the new vitalists have in mind They imagine the bioenergetic field as a holistic living force that goes beyond reductionist physics and chemistry 39 Such a field is sometimes explained as electromagnetic though some advocates also make confused appeals to quantum physics 30 Joanne Stefanatos states that The principles of energy medicine originate in quantum physics 40 Stenger 39 offers several explanations as to why this line of reasoning may be misplaced He explains that energy exists in discrete packets called quanta Energy fields are composed of their component parts and so only exist when quanta are present Therefore energy fields are not holistic but are rather a system of discrete parts that must obey the laws of physics This also means that energy fields are not instantaneous These facts of quantum physics place limitations on the infinite continuous field that is used by some theorists to describe so called human energy fields 41 Stenger continues explaining that the effects of EM forces have been measured by physicists as accurately as one part in a billion and there is yet to be any evidence that living organisms emit a unique field 39 Vitalistic thinking has been identified in the naive biological theories of children Recent experimental results show that a majority of preschoolers tend to choose vitalistic explanations as most plausible Vitalism together with other forms of intermediate causality constitute unique causal devices for naive biology as a core domain of thought 42 See also editEgregore Energy esotericism Etheric body Georges Canguilhem Henri Bergson Holism in science Homeopathy Hylozoism Irreducible complexity Lebensphilosophie Mind body dualism Morphic resonance Odic force Orenda Orgone Orthogenesis Qi Ratiovitalism Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism Vis medicatrix naturae Vital materialism VitalityNotes edit Stephane Leduc and D Arcy Thompson On Growth and Form published a series of works that in Evelyn Fox Keller s view took on the task of uprooting the remaining vestiges of vitalism essentially by showing that the principles of physics and chemistry were enough by themselves to account for the growth and development of biological form 2 On the other hand Michael Ruse notes that D Arcy Thompson s avoidance of natural selection had an odor of spirit forces about it 3 In 1845 Adolph Kolbe succeeded in making acetic acid from inorganic compounds and in the 1850s Marcellin Berthelot repeated this feat for numerous organic compounds In retrospect Wohler s work was the beginning of the end of Berzelius s vitalist hypothesis but only in retrospect as Ramberg had shown See 25 briefly some philosophers see emergentism as midway between traditional spiritual vitalism and mechanistic reductionism others argue that structurally emergentism is equivalent to vitalism See also 26 References edit a b c Bechtel William Williamson Robert C 1998 Vitalism In E Craig ed Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Evelyn Fox Keller Making Sense of Life Explaining Biological Development with Models Metaphors and Machines Harvard University Press 2002 Ruse Michael 2013 17 From Organicism to Mechanism and Halfway Back In Henning Brian G Scarfe Adam eds Beyond Mechanism Putting Life Back Into Biology Lexington Books p 419 ISBN 9780739174371 Williams Elizabeth Ann 2003 A Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier Ashgate p 4 ISBN 978 0 7546 0881 3 a b c Developmental Biology 8e Online A Selective History of Induction Archived from the original on October 31 2006 a b Sebastian Normandin Charles T Wolfe 2013 Introduction Springer p 104 ISBN 978 94 007 2445 7 In medicine and biology vitalism has been seen as a philosophically charged term a pseudoscientific gloss that corrupted scientific practice a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Jidenu Paulin 1996 African Philosophy 2nd Ed Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 21096 8 p 16 Birch amp Cobb 1985 p 75 a b c d Birch amp Cobb 1985 pp 76 78 a b Ede Andrew 2007 The Rise and Decline of Colloid Science in North America 1900 1935 The Neglected Dimension p 23 History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences p 238 Wilkinson Ian 10 June 2002 History of Clinical Chemistry EJIFCC 13 4 114 118 ISSN 1650 3414 PMC 6208063 Kinne Saffran E Kinne R K H August 7 1999 Vitalism and Synthesis of Urea American Journal of Nephrology 19 2 290 294 doi 10 1159 000013463 PMID 10213830 S2CID 71727190 via www karger com Ramberg Peter J 2000 The Death of Vitalism and the Birth of Organic Chemistry Wohler s Urea Synthesis and the Disciplinary Identity of Organic Chemistry Ambix 47 3 170 195 doi 10 1179 amb 2000 47 3 170 PMID 11640223 S2CID 44613876 Schummer Joachim December 2003 The notion of nature in chemistry PDF Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 34 4 705 736 doi 10 1016 S0039 3681 03 00050 5 Otis Laura October 2004 Johannes Peter Muller 1801 1858 PDF Virtual Laboratory Essays and Resources on the Experimentalization of Life Max Planck Institute Galatzer Levy R M August 7 1976 Psychic Energy A Historical Perspective Ann Psychoanal 4 41 61 via PEP Web Mayr Ernst 2002 BOTANY ONLINE Ernst MAYR Walter Arndt Lecture The Autonomy of Biology Archived from the original on 2006 09 26 Retrieved 2006 09 24 Ernst Mayr Toward a new philosophy of biology observations of an evolutionist 1988 p 13 ISBN 978 0674896666 Noll Richard Jung s concept of die Dominanten the Dominants 1997 via www academia edu a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Bowler Peter J Reconciling science and religion the debate in early twentieth century Britain 2001 pp 168 169 ISBN 978 0226068589 a b Mayr Ernst 2010 The Decline of Vitalism In Bedau Mark A Cleland Carol E eds The Nature of Life Classical and Contemporary Perspectives from Philosophy and Science Cambridge University Press pp 93 95 ISBN 9781139488655 Yet considering how dominant vitalism was in biology and for how long a period it prevailed it is surprising how rapidly and completely it collapsed The last support of vitalism as a viable concept in biology disappeared about 1930 p 94 From p 95 Vitalism survived even longer in the writings of philosophers than it did in the writings of physicists But so far as I know there are no vitalists among the philosophers of biology who started publishing after 1965 Nor do I know of a single reputable living biologist who still supports straightforward vitalism The few late twentieth century biologists with vitalist leanings A Hardy S Wright A Portmann are no longer alive Schultz S G 1998 A century of epithelial transport physiology from vitalism to molecular cloning The American Journal of Physiology 274 1 Pt 1 C13 23 doi 10 1152 ajpcell 1998 274 1 C13 PMID 9458708 Gilbert S F Sarkar S 2000 Embracing complexity organicism for the 21st century Developmental Dynamics 219 1 1 9 doi 10 1002 1097 0177 2000 9999 9999 lt AID DVDY1036 gt 3 0 CO 2 A PMID 10974666 O Connor Timothy 2021 Emergent Properties The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Emmeche C 16 July 2001 Does a robot have an Umwelt Reflections on the qualitative biosemiotics of Jakob von Uexkull PDF Semiotica 2001 134 653 693 doi 10 1515 semi 2001 048 Emmeche C 1997 Explaining Emergence towards an ontology of levels Journal for General Philosophy of Science available online Archived 2006 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Best M Neuhauser D Slavin L 2003 Evaluating Mesmerism Paris 1784 the controversy over the blinded placebo controlled trials has not stopped Quality amp Safety in Health Care 12 3 232 3 doi 10 1136 qhc 12 3 232 PMC 1743715 PMID 12792017 Complementary and Alternative Medicine U S National Library of Medicine Collection Development Manual Retrieved 2008 03 31 a b c Rubik Beverly Bioenergetic Medicines American Medical Student Association Foundation Archived from the original on 2006 02 14 Retrieved 8 November 2006 Mihi a docto doctore Demandatur causam et rationem quare Opium facit dormire A quoi respondeo Quia est in eo Vertus dormitiva Cujus est natura Sensus assoupire Le Malade imaginaire French Wikisource The Physical Basis of Life Pall Mall Gazette 1869 Crick Francis 1967 Of Molecules and Men Great Minds Series Prometheus Books 2004 reviewed here Crick s remark is cited and discussed in Hein H 2004 Molecular biology vs organicism The enduring dispute between mechanism and vitalism Synthese 20 238 253 who describes Crick s remark as raising spectral red herrings a b Pseudoscience and Postmodernism Antagonists or Fellow Travelers pdf Joseph C Keating Jr PhD Biographical sketch Archived from the original on May 25 2006 a b c Keating Joseph C 2002 The Meanings of Innate The Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association 46 1 4 10 PMC 2505097 a b Williams William F ed 2013 Vitalism Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience From Alien Abductions to Zone Therapy revised ed p 367 ISBN 9781135955229 VITALISM The concept that bodily functions are due to a vital principle or life force that is distinct from the physical forces explainable by the laws of chemistry and physics Many alternative approaches to modern medicine are rooted in vitalism The exact nature of the vital force was debated by early philosophers but vitalism in one form or another remained the preferred thinking behind most science and medicine until 1828 That year German scientist Friedrich Wohler 1800 82 synthesized an organic compound from an inorganic substance a process that vitalists considered to be impossible Vitalists claim to be scientific but in fact they reject the scientific method with its basic postulates of cause and effect and of provability They often regard subjective experience to be more valid than objective material reality Today vitalism is one of the ideas that form the basis for many pseudoscientific health systems that claim that illnesses are caused by a disturbance or imbalance of the body s vital force Victor J Stenger s site Archived from the original on March 3 2016 a b c Stenger Victor J Spring Summer 1999 The Physics of Alternative Medicine Bioenergetic Fields The Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine 3 1 Archived from the original on 2006 12 18 Retrieved 2006 12 03 Stefanatos J 1997 Introduction to Bioenergetic Medicine Shoen A M and S G Wynn Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine Principles and Practices Mosby Yearbook Chicago Biley Francis C 2005 Unitary Health Care Martha Rogers Science of Unitary Human Beings University of Wales College of Medicine viewed 30 November 2006 RogersHomepage Archived from the original on 2006 12 05 Retrieved 2006 12 02 Inagaki K Hatano G 2004 Vitalistic causality in young children s naive biology Trends Cogn Sci 8 8 356 62 doi 10 1016 j tics 2004 06 004 PMID 15335462 S2CID 29256474 Sources editBirch Charles Cobb John B 1985 The Liberation of Life From the Cell to the Community CUP Archive ISBN 9780521315142 History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences Vol 29 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Vitalism Vitalism on In Our Time at the BBC Vitalism at the Skeptic s DictionaryFor vital force and vitalism in the Spanish context see Nicolas Fernandez Medina s Life Embodied The Promise of Vital Force in Spanish Modernity McGill Queen s UP 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vitalism amp oldid 1194513130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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