Morphology And Functionality
The basic and leading principles for analyzing or forming a theory about any natural process, is the ability of the observer to relate the morphological as well as functional links governing that process in a way that can form a synthetic, or posteriori judgment, on the necessity of the relationship detected. Such observation can show how form and function do indicate some historical necessity, as well as coherence, between, for example, the geometry of the bottom feeders and the hydrostatic efficiency of the structure.
Sometimes an accidental relationship is observed in a species which can be easily be classified as “redundant” or ornamental in that living entity, but upon careful consideration will show the historical nature of such features to be instrumental in the survival of that species.
Historic Necessity And Accidental Attributes.
Our duty as observers is to uncover the essential, as well as the historic connections, that form the specific process or mechanism which enable the functionality of a system. Connections like those that can be observed in a pump or the characteristics of magnetic waveforms. My encounter with D’Arcy’s insights, which showed the fundamental relation between morphology and function, is the basis for my work. My acquaintance with D’Arcy’s text should be categorized as a “methodological tool” since this creative process is not just a commentary on a specific observation of a particular phenomenon, but a general formula or framework for the natural scientist’s ability to uncover the governing principles of any system.
D’Arcy taught me the fundamental attitude that the observer needs to assume, and the proper state of mind when uncovering the behavior of a process and its physical attributes.
Manifestation Or Hard Work
Over the years I have written and published many of my observations on a variety of topics including, Magnetic Control, The Shaping of Magnetic Wave-Front while Employing Quantum Mechanical Formalism to Support Maxwell Canonical Representation , Pumps with Biological Structure Simulating Sea Urchin Duty Cycle while Substituting Piezoelectric Tendon for Muscle Like Behavior, and Biosensors Formed out of Sio2 Substrate with Analog/Aptamer Segment of RNA to Detect Tumor Markers or Hybridization of Salmonella. If any biographical notes are needed to understand my motivation or the subsequent results as exemplified by my writings, all of the above are the result of careful observations using D’Arcy’s methodology.
Medical technologies that can emulate the efficiency of living colonies were best described and addressed by the limited words and notes following D’Arcy’s book Growth and Form. First published in 1917, this book is D’Arcy’s radical departure from standard zoology. Looking outside the scope of comparative morphology and evolution, he sought to study nature from a mathematical perspective. He looked to both ancient as well as modern texts to put together his observations on the development of the form and structure in all living things. The resulting text is a poetic treatise dedicated to the wonders of nature. What makes his observations so rich are his careful considerations and blending of philosophy and natural observations. The great German philosopher Immanuel Kant declared that “The criterion of true science is in its relation to mathematics.” Adds D’Arcy, ‘‘numerical precision is the very soul of science.’’ D’Arcy is very careful to point out that he has no interest in reducing the wonders and mystery of the living body to a mechanism or a mathematical formula. He remains an individual who is impressed by the beauty manifested in adaptation in all creatures; whether it is, the flower for the bee or the berry for the bird. He maintains that inquiry into the way in which both living things and physical phenomena grow and take on a specific shape should be approached in the spirit of both scientific theory and mystery. D’Arcy describes his objective in writing the work as follows,
“We want to see how… the forms of living things, of the parts of living things, can be explained by physical considerations and to realize that in general no organic forms exist save such as are in conformity with physical and mathematical laws” - D’Arcy |