Emergence during embryonic development of various characters or structures that appeared during the evolutionary history of the strain or species.
Concept of rebirth or re-creation, used in various contexts in philosophy, theology, politics, and biology.
1 They had preserved their character, whereas Gamelin believed in a Revolutionary palingenesis .
2 The birth of a child throws him into dreams of a universal palingenesis .
3 The palingenesis of Leroux or Fourier removes the radical injustice.
4 Its essence is the mystic palingenesis , that is to say, a regeneration brought about by suggestion.
5 It could not last long upon these terms, and again it passed away, and still waits its second palingenesis .
6 Under palingenesis we count those facts of embryology that we can directly regard as a faithful synopsis of the corresponding stem-history.
7 Some can push by the awful hour and live again, but for Anna Dickinson there could be, and was, no such palingenesis .
8 If we pass from India to Egypt, the land of mystery, we again find the world-wide doctrine of palingenesis hidden beneath the same veil.
9 Palingenesis here consisted in dying and being reborn again in Zagreus.
10 Delormel, Descartes, and Lavater were struck with the tremendous importance of the doctrine of Palingenesis .
11 Palingenesis (or "synoptic development") alone enables us to draw conclusions from the observed embryonic form to the stem-form preserved by heredity.
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Translations for palingenesis