TY - JOUR T1 - Reh und Fuchs im Vergleich A1 - Grassi, Pablo JA - Elem. d. Naturw. JF - Elemente der Naturwissenschaft PY - 2009 VL - 91 SP - 19 EP - 34 DO - 10.18756/edn.91.19 SN - p-ISSN 0422-9630 LA - de N2 - Was sind Rehe und Füchse in dem Gebäude der Natur? Sie sind in sich selbst bestehende getrennte Wesenheiten, gleichzeitig sind sie jedoch beide vereint unter dem gleichen wesenhaft wirksamen Begriff. Dadurch werden sie zu einer Notwendigkeit des ganzen Gebäudes der Natur. Diese Beobachtung wurde aus einem einjährigen Forschungsprojekt geschöpft. Der Versuch war, durch philosophisches Gedankenwerk ursprüngliche Fragen der Biologie wieder neu zu befruchten. Das heißt, den Geist in der Biologie zu erwecken, also das Getrennte zu überwinden, um das Ganze – den einmal schon gefühlten Organismus – anschauend zu erfassen. Es geht einerseits um die Schilderungen der Welt des Rehes und des Fuches und anderseits um die Bestimmung ihrer Stellung innerhalb ihrer Familie (Ruminantia und Carnivora). Phänomene und Sachverhalte beider Tiere werden aus verschiedenen Bereichen der Biologie dargestellt, um eine doppelte innere Natur der Tiere zu zeigen: als in sich selbst bestehende getrennte Wesenheit und als ideelle Vereinigung zweier Erscheinungsformen. Teil I des Textes beschäftigt sich mit der Schilderung der Welt des Rehes: eine beschreibende Annäherung durch Phänomene hin zu einem inneren Zusammenhang, der sich als ausgewogene Ganzheit ausdrückt. Teil II folgt in einer späteren Ausgabe. N1 - What are deer and foxes in the edifice of nature? They are organisms that have a separate, self-contained existence, but at the same time both are united by the same intrinsically active concept. Through that they become an essential feature of the whole edifice of nature. This observation arose from a one-year research project. The aim was fruitfully to rethink original questions in biology by philosophical deliberation. This means awakening the spirit of biology, i.e. overcoming separateness in order perceptively to grasp the whole, the organism that we first of all feel. The worlds of the deer and the fox are described, and their place within their respective families (Ruminantia and Carnivora) is defined. Phenomena and facts of both animals from various biological fields are presented in order to show the double inner nature of the animal as a separate, self-contained organism and as an idea unifying the two phenomenal forms discussed. Part one deals with the world of the deer, approaching it descriptively through the phenomenon to reach its inner aspect which is expressed as a balanced whole. Part two will be published in a later issue. AB - What are deer and foxes in the edifice of nature? They are organisms that have a separate, self-contained existence, but at the same time both are united by the same intrinsically active concept. Through that they become an essential feature of the whole edifice of nature. This observation arose from a one-year research project. The aim was fruitfully to rethink original questions in biology by philosophical deliberation. This means awakening the spirit of biology, i.e. overcoming separateness in order perceptively to grasp the whole, the organism that we first of all feel. The worlds of the deer and the fox are described, and their place within their respective families (Ruminantia and Carnivora) is defined. Phenomena and facts of both animals from various biological fields are presented in order to show the double inner nature of the animal as a separate, self-contained organism and as an idea unifying the two phenomenal forms discussed. Part one deals with the world of the deer, approaching it descriptively through the phenomenon to reach its inner aspect which is expressed as a balanced whole. Part two will be published in a later issue. ST - Reh und Fuchs im Vergleich UR - https://dx.doi.org/10.18756/edn.91.19 Y2 - 2024-11-03 11:38:23 ER -