The document discusses the origins and history of biology. It begins by explaining that the word "biology" was coined in 1800 by Karl Friedrich Burdach, combining the Greek words "bios" meaning life and "logy" meaning study. It then discusses how biology developed as a field, with early contributors including Aristotle studying animal anatomy and William Harvey discovering blood circulation. The document also outlines the major branches of biology like taxonomy, anatomy, and physiology that emerged from the 16th century scientific revolution. Finally, it notes that modern biology studies life at various scales, from molecules to ecosystems.
The document discusses the origins and history of biology. It begins by explaining that the word "biology" was coined in 1800 by Karl Friedrich Burdach, combining the Greek words "bios" meaning life and "logy" meaning study. It then discusses how biology developed as a field, with early contributors including Aristotle studying animal anatomy and William Harvey discovering blood circulation. The document also outlines the major branches of biology like taxonomy, anatomy, and physiology that emerged from the 16th century scientific revolution. Finally, it notes that modern biology studies life at various scales, from molecules to ecosystems.
The document discusses the origins and history of biology. It begins by explaining that the word "biology" was coined in 1800 by Karl Friedrich Burdach, combining the Greek words "bios" meaning life and "logy" meaning study. It then discusses how biology developed as a field, with early contributors including Aristotle studying animal anatomy and William Harvey discovering blood circulation. The document also outlines the major branches of biology like taxonomy, anatomy, and physiology that emerged from the 16th century scientific revolution. Finally, it notes that modern biology studies life at various scales, from molecules to ecosystems.
The document discusses the origins and history of biology. It begins by explaining that the word "biology" was coined in 1800 by Karl Friedrich Burdach, combining the Greek words "bios" meaning life and "logy" meaning study. It then discusses how biology developed as a field, with early contributors including Aristotle studying animal anatomy and William Harvey discovering blood circulation. The document also outlines the major branches of biology like taxonomy, anatomy, and physiology that emerged from the 16th century scientific revolution. Finally, it notes that modern biology studies life at various scales, from molecules to ecosystems.
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Biology
The word Biology had been coined in
1800 by Karl Friedrich Burdach. (German anatomist and physiologist ) 2 Greek words (bios)- meaning "life", Logy', meaning "science of", "knowledge of", "study of", History of the word "biology" 1802 - The term biology in its broaded sense was propounded by: Gottfried Reinhold Treviranus (Philosophy of living nature, )
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (Hydrogeology). used and defined for the first time
A way of understanding the nature of living things a science that is linked to other sciences and transcends such sciences as chemistry, physics, mathematics and geology .
What is Biology? Definition: Definition field where all the sciences meet the social domains and the humanities such as: economics, politics and environmental ethics due to mans interaction with his environment
Bio-Economics - The study of living organisms from economic point of view It includes the study of cost effectiveness and viability of biological projects from commercial point of view.
Biophysics - The study of various biological phenomena according to principles of physics is called biophysics. For example, movement of muscles and bones based on principles of physics. (Force) (Load) LEVER Biochemistry Biogeography -The study of plants and animals and the basis of geographical distribution is called Biogeography. Why Study Biology? 1. Biology is relevant to our everyday experience Medical advances Addressing needs of growing human population Challenges of decreasing rate of biodiversity Biotechnology advances
Why Study Biology? 2. Biology can be controversial Examples: Dealing with endangered species? Use of human fetal tissue in biomedical research Safety of irradiated foods
Significance of studying Biology Good Citizenship
Group activity Discuss with your group how Biology is significant to you as: living things as decision maker and in dealing with critical/controversial issues such as abortion, environmental degradation etc. A study of biology enables you to understand and value your place in the earths environment as well as your relationship with other life forms. As a conscious being, you are confronted with making choices on how to sustain your own life and health. helps you understand the basic mechanisms of bodily processes; hence, it enables you to make choices and decisions for yourself as a food and medical consumer, as well as energy user. You live in an era of escalating dimensions of science and technology. Knowledge of significant developments in biology and biotechnology will eliminate confusing and threatening views bothering your mind and help you develop positive view BIOLOGY: How It Came About How Biology Came About? How do pre historic men contribute to the development and progress of BIOLOGY? All prehistoric paintings are all dealt with biological specimen like animals plants and human beings Paintings From the Hall of the Bulls at Lascaux(SW FRANCE) revealed that primitive man were close to nature Paintings From the Hall of the Bulls at Lascaux(SW FRANCE) They hunted wild animals like deer, wild pigs, and large birds. They gathered wild fruits, berries, and nuts. They fished and collected shellfish and crabs. They gathered wild tubers (root vegetables, like potatoes and carrots), vegetables, and grains.
For thousands of years humans lived like this. But then, around 10,000 years ago humans started to adopt a farming way of life. They learned to domisticate and cultivate plants for their own use. Types of plants that were domesticated Barley and Wheat Muskmelon (now developed into cantaloupe, honeydew, etc) lentils The domestication of plants and animals dramatically changed the way humans interacted with their environment. One aspect of natural history was the use of herbal and medicinal plants. Early herbalist provided the foundation of our present knowledge Of drugs and medicine A. Ancient Study of Biology They began their Biological investigations before 500 B.C They believed to find answer to their questions about nature one must investigate. One must use her/his ability to reason and understand life and nature. This is basically the same doctrine which guides scientist today. The greatest natural philosophers who lived in the Golden Age of Greece. The father of Biology
Aristotle He studied the heart and brains of animals. From this study, he correlated the warming- cooling function of the heart and brain to human feelings and emotions. became the greatest authority on human anatomy. He obtained his knowledge from the dissection of animals. The best model for most his description of human anatomy was the Barbary ape. Galen, a Roman physician Following Galen was rebellious Belgian student named Andreas Vesalius. His method and teaching and his anatomy book set new and lasting standards for the science of anatomy. He believed that anatomy should be based on the direct observations and that the results must not be accepted without questions. Andreas Vesalius He was a physiologist. He used his knowledge of anatomy to study and understand the circulation of blood. Determined the true function of the heart and blood vessels. William Harvey, an English physician Marcelo Malpighi- an Italian scientist who also dealt with blood by observing capillaries in the lungs of frog. Original drawing by Marcello Malpighi (1681): preparation of two slightly inflated frog lungs, where a reticulum of microvessels is apparent in place of "capillaries". (Adapted from Fishman and Richards, 1964). B. 18 th to 20 th century Biologist Eucharias Jansen- a Dutch spectacle maker, who likes Galileo, is credited with inventing the early microscope. Antoine Van Leeuwenhoek- a Dutch microscopist, who introduced us to the world of microorganism with the use of microscopes. He is the father of Microbiology with his inventions and discoveries. Carolus Linnaeus - who develop the binomial system for identifying and naming organisms developed concepts and theory of evolutions 1933 1933-1964 1964-1986 1986-present Modern Day Biologists (1970- 2001) A very popular in these times is to sequence the human genome from Watson and Crick double helical structure of DNA in order to draft the sequence genome of yeast and mouse.
developed theories related to Genetics 1. Do you find the contributions of ancient Biologists significant to modern Biology? Why?
2. Have you seen the importance of the effect of the study of one Biologist in encouraging other Biologist to pursue the same study? Cite an example. SCIENCE Since the study of biology is so vast and complex specialized branches evolved in 1543.This sparked the start of the so Called scientific revolution Taxonomy- systematized the grouping and naming of living things Morphology -formalized the study of forms and structures of organism into lower forms to higher forms Anatomy- made possible the study of the structure of the internal parts of living organism Cytology- study of cell Histology study of tissue Related Disciplines and Approaches Embryology -deals with the study of how the organism develop from a microscopic egg to an adult individual Physiology- focused on the function and chemical activities Biogeography- simplified the study of the distribution of the organisms on the earth surface Zoology- study of animals Botany -study of plants Anatomy - study of internal structures of living things Phytopathology - study of plant diseases Taxonomy - study of systematic classification Ecology - study of mans interaction with his environment Genetics - study of heredity Microbiology - study of microorganisms Together, they study life over a wide range of scales:
at the atomic and molecular scale, through molecular biology, biochemistry at the cellular scale, through cell biology at the multicellular scales, through physiology, anatomy, and histology at the level of the development or ontogeny of an individual organism, through developmental biology at the level of heredity between parent and offspring through genetics at the level of group behavior through ethology at the level of an entire population, through population genetics on the multi-species scale of lineages, through systematics at the level of interdependent populations and their habitats through ecology and evolutionary biology speculatively through Xenobiology at the level of life beyond the Earth.