Anatomy

Anatomy

 

Given that anatomy is a discipline which can be ascribed the status of hard science, its applicability is not long found given the nature of its construction. As a discipline, it is defined as the study of the body’s morphology and physiology. Simply written, it is the study of the body’s shape and function. Morphology is the study of shape and all of the elements associated with the concept of form, and physiology is the study of function and all of the elements associated with the capacities found relevant to this role. Anatomy, then, again, as a reiteration, is a combination of the enumerable quantitative and qualitative facets that compose the body, its shape, and its function.

Exploring the natural elements of this discipline are where its knowledges develop profundity, given the origins of such a study and the work which would be necessary to see it progress and cement as a field of universal applicability. Compounding notions of philosophical ideation serve as key catalysts in this delineation, and as a compounded dynamic, anatomy and its philosophies work together to paint a general picture of how the field has developed as well as how it continues to grow as a perpetually applicable discipline of science and art.

The philosophy of form and function can generally be interpreted as a rudimentary depiction of wisdom based out of survivalism. Epistemology would find this discipline and its associated practices as evolutions of natural behavior. Clear examples would consist of naturally developed behaviors of complexity that are a result of compounded fundamentalisms. 

Over the course of its development, anatomy has served as a clear example of how a discipline which has evolved from an analogous framework, liken unto that of the example described above, can grow to be a standing field of scientific complexity. The philosophical notion of something developing to be a complex derivation of its origins is not new to nature or its scientific interpretations, but fundamentality, and the subsequent development of complexity, is a concept that speaks upon the unique power of knowledge to grow from its origins. In this growth, the dynamics of anatomy and philosophy find a unique intermarriage that has fought its way into scholarship as a progressive philosophical depiction of a tactile science coupled with  an increase of knowledgeable giving and understanding.

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