physiophyly

English

Etymology

Simplified learned borrowing from German Physiophylogenie, itself from physio- +‎ Phylogenie; equivalent to a reduction of physio- +‎ phylogeny to physio- (nature) +‎ -phyly (tribehood).

Noun

physiophyly (uncountable)

  1. (historical, biology, theory of recapitulation, rare) The direct study of the evolution of functions and vital activities rather than observation of its supposed ontogenic recapitulation.[1]

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References

  1. ^ Ernst Haeckel (1874) “Das Grundgesetz der organischen Entwickelung” (chapter I), in Anthropogenie; oder, Entwickelungsgeschichte des Menschen. Gemeinverständliche wissenschaftliche Vorträge über die Grundzüge der Menschlichen. Keimes- und Stammes-geschichte, volume 1, page 18; translated as “The Fundamental Law of the Evolution of Organisms”, in The Evolution of Man: A Popular Exposition of the Principal Points of Human Ontophyly and Phylophyly. From the German of Ernst Haeckel., 1897, page 24.