Susan Chacoff
Bio
Hi, I have many interests which focus on spirituality, Fortune Telling, Tarot card readings, occult and business Teachings. I find these subjects inspiring and enlightening. I am a Humanitarian it is my mission to inspire and Heal.
Stories (2/0)
The Human Condition
The word physiology is inferred from two Greek words namely Physios which implies nature and Lugia which means to study therefore physiology can actually be characterized as a study of nature in more particular and appropriate terms physiology can be characterized as a department of Biology that deals with the typical capacities of living things as well as the chemical and physical mechanisms behind these functions for example, the major work of the digestive system is to guarantee nutrition. The physiology of assimilation clarifies how food gets into the body and the different processes by which distinctive nourishment sorts are broken down for retention and utilization as well as the forms included in the ejection of thicker matter. Another example of the major work of the hereditary system is to guarantee production and the physiology of the production explains how sex comes about in fertilization and how the fertilized egg divides grows and separates to create a viable neonate at birth. It can therefore be said that physiology uncovers the mysteries behind the complicated working of living things ranging from the littlest infections to the biggest trees and the foremost complicated humans. The consideration of physiology dates back to about 420 the time of Hippocrates the Greek rationalist, and celebrated father of medicine who in an endeavour to clarify how the human body functions coined the theory of haemorrhaging stating that the body comprises four fluids. These liquids were believed to exist at different temperatures; each of which was composed of one of the four fundamental elements air, fire, heat and water. An adjustment within the volume of this liquid was fundamental for one to be healthy.
By Susan Chacoff11 months ago in Humans