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)
- (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]
Antonyms
Hypernyms
Coordinate terms
References
- “physiophyly”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- ^ 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.