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Word Meanings - VITALISTIC - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Pertaining to, or involving, vitalism, or the theory of a special vital principle.

Related words: (words related to VITALISTIC)

  • INVOLVEDNESS
    The state of being involved.
  • VITALIZATION
    The act or process of vitalizing, or infusing the vital principle.
  • VITALISTIC
    Pertaining to, or involving, vitalism, or the theory of a special vital principle.
  • VITAL
    1. Belonging or relating to life, either animal or vegetable; as, vital energies; vital functions; vital actions. 2. Contributing to life; necessary to, or supporting, life; as, vital blood. Do the heavens afford him vital food Spenser. And vital
  • VITALLY
    In a vital manner.
  • SPECIALLY
    1. In a special manner; partcularly; especially. Chaucer. 2. For a particular purpose; as, a meeting of the legislature is specially summoned.
  • PERTAIN
    stretch out, reach, pertain; per + tenere to hold, keep. See Per-, 1. To belong; to have connection with, or dependence on, something, as an appurtenance, attribute, etc.; to appertain; as, saltness pertains to the ocean; flowers pertain to plant
  • THEORY
    1. A doctrine, or scheme of things, which terminates in speculation or contemplation, without a view to practice; hypothesis; speculation. Note: "This word is employed by English writers in a very loose and improper sense. It is with them usually
  • SPECIALISM
    Devotion to a particular and restricted part or branch of knowledge, art, or science; as, medical specialism.
  • SPECIALIZATION
    The setting spart of a particular organ for the performance of a particular function. Darwin. (more info) 1. The act of specializing, or the state of being spezialized.
  • SPECIALIZE
    To supply with an organ or organs having a special function or functions. (more info) 1. To mention specialy; to particularize. 2. To apply to some specialty or limited object; to assign to a specific use; as, specialized knowledge.
  • INVOLVE
    To raise to any assigned power; to multiply, as a quantity, into itself a given number of times; as, a quantity involved to the third or fourth power. Syn. -- To imply; include; implicate; complicate; entangle; embarrass; overwhelm. -- To Involve,
  • INVOLVEMENT
    The act of involving, or the state of being involved. Lew Wallace.
  • SPECIALITY
    See SPECIES (more info) 1. A particular or peculiar case; a particularity. Sir M. Hale.
  • SPECIALIST
    One who devotes himself to some specialty; as, a medical specialist, one who devotes himself to diseases of particular parts of the body, as the eye, the ear, the nerves, etc.
  • VITALISM
    The doctrine that all the functions of a living organism are due to an unknown vital principle distinct from all chemical and physical forces.
  • VITALIC
    Pertaining to life; vital.
  • VITALIZE
    To endow with life, or vitality; to give life to; to make alive; as, vitalized blood.
  • INVOLVED
    See INVOLUTE
  • SPECIALTY
    A contract or obligation under seal; a contract by deed; a writing, under seal, given as security for a debt particularly specified. Chitty. Bouvier. Wharton . Let specialties be therefore drawn between us. Shak. 4. That for which a person
  • VORTEX THEORY
    The theory, advanced by Thomson on the basis of investigation by Helmholtz, that the atoms are vortically moving ring-shaped masses (or masses of other forms having a similar internal motion) of a homogeneous, incompressible, frictionless fluid.
  • REVITALIZE
    To restore vitality to; to bring back to life. L. S. Beale.
  • UNSPECIALIZED
    Not specialized; specifically , not adapted, or set apart, for any particular purpose or function; as, an unspecialized unicellular organism. W. K. Brooks.
  • DINGDONG THEORY
    The theory which maintains that the primitive elements of language are reflex expressions induced by sensory impressions; that is, as stated by Max Müller, the creative faculty gave to each general conception as it thrilled for the first
  • ESPECIALNESS
    The state of being especial.
  • GERM THEORY
    The theory that living organisms can be produced only by the development of living germs. Cf. Biogenesis, Abiogenesis. 2. The theory which attributes contagious and infectious diseases, suppurative lesions, etc., to the agency of germs.
  • SIDE-CHAIN THEORY
    A theory proposed by Ehrlich as a chemical explanation of immunity phenomena. In brief outline it is as follows: Animal cells and bacteria are complex aggregations of molecules, which are themselves complex. Complex molecules react with one another
  • ELECTRO-VITAL
    Derived from, or dependent upon, vital processes; -- said of certain electric currents supposed by some physiologists to circulate in the nerves of animals.
  • FERMENTATION THEORY
    The theory which likens the course of certain diseases (esp. infectious diseases) to the process of fermentation, and attributes them to the organized ferments in the body. It does not differ materially from the accepted germ theory .

 

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