Replenishment and Maintenance of the Human Body (Timaeus 77a–81e)

Apeiron ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lea Aurelia Schroeder

AbstractScholarship on Plato's Timaeus has paid relatively little attention to Tim. 77a–81, a seemingly disjointed passage on topics including plants, respiration, blood circulation, and musical sounds. Despite this comparative neglect, commentators both ancient and modern have levelled a number of serious charges against Timaeus' remarks in the passage, questioning the coherence and explanatory power of what they take to be a theory of respiration. In this paper, I argue that the project of 77a–81e is not to sketch theories of respiration, circulation, and digestion (inter alia), but to explain how the human body is maintained in light of and despite constant environmental depletion. Further, I argue that in order to understand this account of “the replenishing system,” we need to understand Timaeus' striking analogy of the fish trap or nassa. Commentators have generally focused directly on the workings of the bodily construction that Timaeus likens to a fish trap, but without considering how we should understand the analogy qua analogy. I develop a functional reading of the analogy that yields a coherent account of the replenishing system on which previous criticisms of Timaeus' remarks on respiration do not arise. Aside from lending greater unity to the passage, both internally and within its immediate context in the dialogue, this account of the replenishing system contributes to our understanding of Timaeus' reason-and-necessity explanatory framework as applied to the human body and has noteworthy implications for specific explanatory principles, in particular like-to-like motion and circular thrust.

1995 ◽  
Vol 48 (8) ◽  
pp. 461-470 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. McN. Alexander

Many mathematical models of human movement have sought to represent as much as possible of the complexity of the human body but others, the subjects of this review, are extremely simple. Some treat the body as a point mass walking on rigid, massless legs or bouncing along on a spring. Others incorporate a few limb segments with appropriate masses, operated in some cases by a few muscles with realistic physiological properties. These simple models have been used to tackle questions such as these: why do we walk at low speeds but break into a run to go faster? Why do we change the length of our strides, and the patterns of force we exert on the ground, as we increase speed? Why do high jumpers run up more slowly than long jumpers and set down the take-off leg at a shallower angle? Why do we activate muscles sequentially, when throwing a ball? In every case the explanatory power of the model is enhanced by its simplicity.


Nuncius ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-131
Author(s):  
Irina Podgorny

AbstractBy considering the work of American embalmer, lawyer, and physician Carl Lewis Barnes (1872-1927), this paper analyzes the emergence of modern embalming in America. Barnes experimented with and exhibited the techniques by which embalming fluids travelled into the most remote cavities of the human body. In this sense, modern embalmers based their skills and methods on experimental medicine, turning the anatomy of blood vessels, physiology of circulation, and composition of blood into a circuit that allowed embalming fluids to move throughout the corpse. Embalmers in the late 19th century took ownership of the laws of hydrodynamics and the physiology of blood circulation to market their fluids and equipment, thus playing the role of physiologists of death, performing and demonstrating physiological experiments with dead bodies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 388-395
Author(s):  
B. Chakarova ◽  
M. Mitev

Dirofilariasis in humans is a rarely diagnosed vector-borne zoonotic helminthic invasion. It is caused from filarial nematodes genus Dirofilaria & Railliet Henry, 1911 (Onchocercidae, Nematoda). Usually, the life cycle of the parasite takes place between mosquitoes (Culicidae) and carnivores. The human is an accidental host for the dirofilaria wherefore microfilariae in his blood circulation are almost always absent. The pathology of dirofilariasis results from the accidental localization of immature worms in the human body. Dirofilaria immitis caused heart and pulmonary dirofilariasis, but Dirofilaria repens, D. tenuis, and others can are found in different parts of the human body. The spread and Dirofilaria-invasive rates аrе undergone significant modifications affected by global climate change. Surgical extraction of the parasite in humans usually has a therapeutic effect, after which an etiological diagnosis is possible. The aim of the study is to review the current situation of human dirofilariasis in clinical and epidemiological aspects and possibilities for diagnosis.


Populism ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-64
Author(s):  
Andreas Fagerholm

Abstract Existing studies on the coalitionability of radical and—oftentimes—populist (right or/and left) parties have concluded that government inclusion of these parties follows a complex and multi-causal pattern, and that the explanatory power of the conventional “size and ideology”-framework is limited. Starting from this observation, the present study sets out to further strengthen our understanding of radical government participation. First, the paper seeks to substantiate the relationships observed in a previous configurational cross-case analysis focusing on factors related to size and ideology: How is size and ideology related to radical government participation? The second aim of the paper is to further improve our understanding of why and when radical parties participate in coalition governments: If well-known factors related to electoral and parliamentary strength and ideological aptitude are—as recent cross-case evidence indicate—able to explain radical government participation only partly, which are the additional components that should be included in an enhanced explanatory framework?


Author(s):  
Laura Rosella Schluderer

In line with the growing recognition of fifth century Pythagoreans as the main developers of a Pythagorean philosophy, the article offers a reconstruction of Philolaus’ metaphysical framework, arguing for its potential explanatory power and anticipating some key notions in ancient metaphysics. Starting from the scala naturae in B13, I reconstruct Philolaus’ overall metaphysical framework from his fragments, exploring how it might have worked when applied to micro-macrocosmic ontology. Key to this reconstruction is musical harmony. It is shown how, by using musical harmony as a paradigm and making explicit its mathematical structure, Philolaus (a) possessed a rather sophisticated explanatory framework, capable of accounting for the complex structure of the cosmos and of living beings; and (b) began to grasp the importance of a normative, abstract, structural principles working at a different metaphysical level from the constituents of things, thus anticipating Aristotle’s distinction between material and formal causes.


2022 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Hopkins ◽  
Saúl Maté-Cid ◽  
Robert Fulford ◽  
Gary Seiffert ◽  
Jane Ginsborg ◽  
...  

Performing music or singing together provides people with great pleasure. But if you are deaf (or hard of hearing) it is not always possible to listen to other musicians while trying to sing or play an instrument. It can be particularly difficult to perceive different musical pitches with a hearing aid or other hearing-assistance device. However, the human body can transmit musical sounds to the brain when vibrations are applied to the skin. In other words, we can feel music. Our research has identified a safe way for deaf people to hear musical notes through the skin of their hands and feet. We have shown that vibration allows people to safely feel music on the skin. This approach allows people to identify a musical note as being higher or lower in pitch than other notes, and it helps musicians to play music together.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bing Luo

In blood circulation (systemic circulation), the order of blood circulation is that arterial blood flows into capillaries only after venous blood refluxes. The human body controls the flow of arterial blood into capillaries by controlling the flow of venous blood. The refluxing power of venous blood changes with the rotation and revolution of the earth, and leads to changes in arterial blood obtained by cells, tissues and organs. If the refluxing power of venous blood of the lungs has a problem, the actual amount of blood obtained by the lungs will be less than the amount of blood distributed to the lungs by the human body (supplying the lungs with nutrients and oxygen they need), and what Pasteur called “the terrain” (There is a paragraph in Seasons of Life: “On his deathbed, Louis Pasteur, the founder of the germ theory of disease, allegedly said, ‘the germ is nothing, the terrain is everything’.”) will form in the lungs. The severity of problems induced by the intensity of venous reflux changes with time, leading to the variation of lung’s susceptibility to viral infections with time.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-76
Author(s):  
Luca Tonetti

In this paper, I would like to analyse the impact of the discovery of lymphatic system on the development of the modern conception of human body. The discovery of lymphatics, as that of blood circulation, has in fact questioned important tenets of Galen's anatomo-physiology. Galen defended a 'dualistic conception' of the blood: he distinguished two different systems, the hepatic-venous system and the cardio-arterial one. The liver played a pivotal role because it was believed to transform the chyle received by the portal vein into venous blood. The discovery of lymphatics challenged this view: 17th-century anatomical dissections and experiments, starting with the discovery of milky veins by Gaspare Aselli (1581-1625) and the studies on thoracic duct by Jean Pecquet (1622-1674), irrefutably showed that the chyle does not pour out in the liver and that, consequently, the liver does not produce blood.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jurijs Dehtjars ◽  
Ksenija Jasina ◽  
Viesturs Larins ◽  
Aleksandrs Okss ◽  
Konstantins Pudovskis ◽  
...  

The aim of the study was to find out if magnetic field generated by the human body affects a human blood flow. The idea is based on Lenz's law where the blood flow induces an opposing alternating magnetic field (OAMF). In the experiment the OAMF will be modulated by repeating heart contractions (pulses). In an experiment with metallized coils it was found that wearing metal coils affects blood flow and it differs from when coils were not worn.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document