Article ID: CBB001451908

Teleomechanism Redux? Functional Physiology and Hybrid Models of Life in Early Modern Natural Philosophy (2014)

unapi

Wolfe, Charles T. (Author)


Gesnerus
Volume: 71, no. 2
Issue: 2
Pages: 290-307

The distinction between `mechanical' and `teleological' has been familiar since Kant; between a fully mechanistic, quantitative science of Nature and a teleological, qualitative approach to living beings, namely `organisms' understood as purposive or at least functional entities. The beauty of this distinction is that it apparently makes intuitive sense and maps onto histo - rico-conceptual constellations in the life sciences, regarding the status of the body versus that of the machine. I argue that the mechanism-teleology distinction is imprecise and flawed using examples including the `functional' features present even in Cartesian physiology, the Oxford Physiologists' work on circulation and respiration, the fact that the model of the `body-machine' is not a mechanistic reduction of organismic properties to basic physical properties but is focused on the uniqueness of organic life; and the concept of `animal economy' in vitalist medicine, which I present as a `teleomechanistic' concept of organism (borrowing a term of Lenoir's which he applied to nineteenth-century embryology) -- neither mechanical nor teleological. Keywords: Teleomechanism, mechanism, teleology, vitalism, physiology

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Authors & Contributors
Aubin, Nicholas
Isabel Fay Barton
Nicoli, Elena
Garau, Rodolfo
Vegetti, Mario
Strazzoni, Andrea
Journals
Science in Context
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Medicina nei Secoli - Arte e Scienza
Lychnos
Korean Journal of Medical History
Journal of the History of Philosophy
Publishers
Cortina Editore
Emory University
Palgrave Macmillan
Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin
University of Chicago
Concepts
Mechanism; mechanical philosophy
Vitalism
Natural philosophy
Medicine
Teleology
Physiology
People
Stahl, Georg Ernst
Galen
Descartes, René
Boyle, Robert
Sherrington, Charles Scott
Virchow, Rudolf Carl
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
Ancient
Early modern
Renaissance
19th century
Places
Europe
England
Scotland
Germany
France
Institutions
Université de Montpellier
Royal Society of London
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