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Biofact





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  1. Biofact

    Biofact may refer to Biofact archaeology Biofact biology Biofact philosophy disambig Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it from being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Long comment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. ...   more details



  1. Biofact (archaeology)

    unreferenced date June 2008 In archaeology , a biofact or ecofact is an object, found at an archaeological site and carrying archaeological significance, but previously unhanded by human s. A common type of biofact is a plant seed . A seed can be linked to the species of plant that produced it if massive numbers of seeds of a cultivated species are found at a site, it may be inferred that the species may have been grown for food or other products that are useful to humans, such as clothing , bedding or building material s. Another type of biofact is an wood carving uncarved , wood en roof beam. Dendrochronology Dendrochronological analysis of some wood samples can help to determine the date during which a site was occupied. Yet another example of a biofact is a bone . archaeology stub Category Methods and principles in archaeology el fi Ekofakti ...   more details



  1. Biofact (biology)

    unreferenced date June 2008 In biology, a biofact is dead material of a once living organism. In 1943, the protozoologist Bruno M. Klein of Vienna 1891 1968 coined the term in his article Biofakt und Artefakt in the microscopy journal Mikrokosmos , though at that time it was not adopted by the scientific community. Klein s concept of biofact stressed the dead materials produced by living organisms as sheaths, such as shells. The word biofact is now widely used in the zoo aquarium world, but was first used in 1993 in the Education Department at the New England Aquarium, Boston, to refer to preserved items such as animal bones, skins, molts and eggs. The Accreditation Standards and Related Policies of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums states that biofacts can be useful education tools, and are preferable to live animals because of potential ethical considerations. Category Biology terminology biology stub ...   more details



  1. Biofact (philosophy)

    In philosophy , sociology and the arts , the word biofact is a Portmanteau hybrid between an Cultural artifact artifact and Organism living being , or between concepts of nature and technology . History of the Concept Biofact was introduced as a neologism in 2001 by the German philosopher Nicole C. Karafyllis and fuses the words artifact and Life bios . ref Nicole C. Karafyllis Biologisch, nat rlich, nachhaltig. Philosophische Aspekte des Naturzugangs im 21. Jahrhundert. Tuebingen A. Francke Publisher chap. 6 ref In 2003, Karafyllis published the book Biofakte in German , which is commonly used as reference for the introduction of the term. ref Nicole C. Karafyllis Hg. , Biofakte. Versuch ber den Menschen zwischen Artefakt und Lebewesen , Mentis Paderborn 2003. ref According to Karafyllis, the word biofact first appeared in a German article entitled Biofakt und Artefakt in 1943, written by the Austrian protozoologist Bruno M. Klein. ref Bruno Maria Klein Artefakt und Biofakt, in Mikrokosmos 1943 44 ref Addressing both microscopy and philosophy, Klein named a Biofact biology biofact something that is a visible dead product emerging from a living being while this being is still alive e.g. a shell . However, Klein s distinction operated with the difference biotic abiotic and dead alive, not with nature technology and growth man made. Philosophy of the Concept With the term biofact , Karafyllis wants to emphasize that living entities can be highly artificial due to methods deriving from agriculture, gardening e.g. breeding or biotechnology e.g. genetic engineering , cloning . Biofacts show signatures of culture and technique. Primarily, the concept aims to argue against the common ... biofact questions if the phenomenon of growth is and was a secure candidate for differentiating ... of its emerging as a living object. For the sociology of science the biofact concept is fruitful ... objects which are released into the lifeworld or public sphere. Particularly because the biofact ...   more details



  1. Biofacticity

    orphan date May 2009 Biofacticity is a philosophical concept that allows to identify a living Object philosophy object as a so called Biofact philosophy biofact , i.e. a semi natural living entitiy in which has been biotechnically interfered during its life span, e.g. transgenic plants or cloned organisms. Biofacticity is an epistemological and ontological term that reflects upon the anthropological term of hybridity . The latter deals with the self definition of subjects rather than objects. In philosophy , sociology and the arts , a biofact stands in close relation to the anthropological concept of the human being a composite of nature and technology . Biofact philosophy Biofact was introduced to philosophy as a neologism in 2001 by the German philosopher Nicole C. Karafyllis and fuses the words Artifact philosophy artifact and bios . One of Karafyllis thesis is that a technical change in living objects, i.e. an increase in biofacticity, will shift the anthropological concept of hybridity towards a technological self definition of the human. Bibliography Nicole C. Karafyllis. Biofakte Versuch ber den Menschen zwischen Artefakt und Lebewesen . Paderborn Mentis 2003 in German philosophy stub Category Philosophy of biology ...   more details



  1. Outline of archaeology

    Archaeological record Archaeological sequence Biofact archaeology Biofact Colluvium Cropmarks Cultural ...   more details



  1. Archaeological sequence

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 The archaeological sequence or sequence for short, on a specific archaeological site can be defined on two levels of rigour. Normally it is adequate to equate it to archaeological record . However, the two terms are not exactly interchangeable. The term Archaeological record is broader in its meaning and can be applied to Artifact archaeology artifacts and other evidence such as Biofact archaeology Biofact s and Manuport s as well as to the stratigraphy of a site. Also, the terms Archaeological sequence and Archaeological stratigraphy are closely related and somewhat interchangeable. These colloquial uses of the term are normal in conversation but The term sequence when narrowly defined, and used in a serious piece of writing, refers to the stratigraphy of a given site or any discrete part of the archaeological record as revealed by Stratification archaeology stratification . It is a succession of Archaeological context s, such that the relationships between them create the sequence chronologically by virtue of their stratigraphic Relationship archaeology relationships . In other words, the events causing the stratigraphic contexts to be deposited happened one after another, in an order which can be determined from study of the several archaeological context contexts . It is this sequence of events which is the archaeological sequence . See also Archaeological record Archaeological field survey Archaeological context Archaeological plan Archaeological association Relationship archaeology Cut archaeology Archaeological section Feature archaeology Single context recording Harris matrix Excavation archaeology Dating methodology archaeology Reverse stratigraphy Commons category Archaeology DEFAULTSORT Archaeological Sequence Category Methods and principles in archaeology Archaeology stub ...   more details



  1. Cultural artifact

    merge Social artifact date December 2010 A cultural artifact is a term used in the social sciences, particularly anthropology , ref cite book url http books.google.com books?id 4SIXk2bp5u8C&pg PP1&dq The pragmalinguistic analysis of narrative texts&lr &as brr 0 v onepage&q &f false title The pragmalinguistic analysis of narrative texts author Richard J. Watts isbn 9783878084433 year 1981 publisher Gunter Narr Verlag ref ethnology , ref cite book url http books.google.com books?lr &as brr 0&q warrabarna kaurna &btnG Search Books title Warrabarna Kaurna author Rob Amery ref and sociology Citation needed date September 2009 for anything created by humans which gives information about the culture of its creator and users. the article should be expanded, and this sentence would be a good start, but it just is not clear enough without rewriting or explanation. The artifact may change over time in what it represents, how it appears and how and why it is used as the culture changes over time. Usage of this term encompasses the type of Artifact archaeology archaeological artifact which is recovered at archaeological site s however, current objects of modern or near modern society are also cultural artifacts. For example, in an anthropological context, a 17th century lathe , a piece of faience , or a television each provide a wealth of information about the time in which they were manufactured and used. Cultural artifacts can provide knowledge about technological processes, economy and social makeup, and a host of other subjects. See also Social artifact Biofact archaeology Biofact Mentifact Art object References references External links sep entry artifact Artifact Risto Hilpinen DEFAULTSORT Cultural Artifact Category Anthropology Category Museology Category Cultural heritage Artifact culture stub socio stub de Kulturartefakt pt Artefacto cultural ...   more details



  1. Artifact (archaeology)

    carcass is a biofact, but a bone carved into a useful implement is an artifact. Similarly there can ... Assemblage Biofact biology Dating methodology archaeology Excavation archaeology Excavation Geofact ...   more details



  1. Nicole C. Karafyllis

    on the modeling interfaces between biology and technology the concept of biofact , established ... a theory of biofacticity . She introduced the term Biofact philosophy biofact in philosophy in 2001 ...   more details



  1. List of philosophical concepts

    This is a list of philosophical concept s . It is intended to be distinct from the list of philosophical theories and contain all and only articles within categories Category Philosophical concepts Philosophical concepts , Category Concepts in aesthetics Concepts in aesthetics , Category Concepts in epistemology Concepts in epistemology , Category Concepts in ethics Concepts in ethics , and Category Concepts in logic Concepts in logic , Category Concepts in metaphysics Concepts in metaphysics . center compactTOC8 side yes top yes num yes NOTOC center A A priori and a posteriori Absolute philosophy Absolute Absolute time and space Abstract object Adiaphora Aesthetic emotions Aesthetic interpretation Agathusia and aschimothusia Alief belief Alief All men are created equal Alternative possibilities Analytic synthetic distinction Anthropic principle Antinomy Apeiron cosmology Apeiron Arborescent Art manifesto Aufheben Autonomy Avant garde B Beauty Being Belief Binary opposition Biofact philosophy Biofact Body without organs Boredom Brain in a vat Brute fact C Cambridge change Camp style Camp Cartesian Other Cartesian Self Categorical imperative Categorization Category of being Causal adequacy principle Causality Choice Civic virtue Class consciousness Class philosophy Class Cogito ergo sum Cognitive closure philosophy Cognitive closure Commensurability ethics Commensurability Common good Common sense Composition of Causes Compossibility Conatus Concept Condition of possibility Conjecture Conscience Consent Construct philosophy of science Construct Creativity Cultural hegemony Cultural sensibility Cuteness D Daimonic De dicto and de re Definition Descriptive knowledge Desiring production Disciplinary institution Discourse Disgust Dispositional and occurrent belief Distributive justice Distrust Documentality Dogma Duty Dwelling E Ecstasy philosophy Ecstasy Efficient cause Elegance Embodied cognition Emergence Empirical method Empirical relationship Empirical research Ente ...   more details



  1. Technoscience

    No footnotes date April 2009 Technoscience is a concept widely used in the interdisciplinary community of science and technology studies to designate the technological and sociology of science social context of science . The notion indicates a common recognition that scientific knowledge is not only sociology of scientific knowledge socially coded and history of science historically situated but sustained and made durable by material non human wikt network network s. Technoscience is a term coined by Belgian philosopher Gilbert Hottois in the late 1970s. Conceptual levels of technoscience We look at the concept of technoscience by considering three levels a descriptive analytic level, a deconstructivist level, and a visionary level. ref Marion Mangelsdorf, de.wikipedia.org wiki Technoscience, for the idea of discerning levels see Mangelsdorf s initial article version of 17 June 2005 ref On a descriptive analytic level , technoscientific studies examine the decisive role of science and technology in how knowledge is being developed. What is the role played by large research labs in which experiments on organisms are undertaken, when it comes to a certain way of looking at the things surrounding us? To what extent do such investigations, experiments and insights shape the view on nature , and on our bodies? How do these insights link to the concept of living organisms as biofact s? To what extent do such insights inform technological innovation ? Can the laboratory be understood as a metaphor for social structures in their entirety? On a deconstructive level , theoretical work is being undertaken on technoscience to address scientific practices critically, e.g. by Bruno Latour Sociology , by Donna Haraway History of science , and by Karen Barad Theoretical physics . It is pointed out that scientific descriptions may be only allegedly objective that descriptions are of a performative character, and that there are ways to de mystify them. Likewise, new forms of Knowledg ...   more details



  1. Bioproducts engineering

    Earth sciences Biology Sustainable development Div col cols 2 Biofact biology Biomass Biomass ecology ...   more details



  1. Bioproducts

    Ecology Earth sciences Biology Sustainable development Div col cols 2 Biofact biology Biomass Biomass ...   more details



  1. Detritus

    also Biofact biology Organic material Soil food web modelling ecosystems Category Aquatic ecology ...   more details



  1. Organic matter

    also Biofact biology Biomass Detritus biology Detritus Humus Organic geochemistry Sedimentary organic ...   more details



  1. Varna Necropolis

    . Among the metallic gold and copper and non metallic minerals, rocks, pottery, pigments, Biofact ...   more details



  1. Biomass

    2011 05 02 . Retrieved on 2012 02 28. ref See also Div col 2 Biochar Bioenergy Biofact ...   more details



  1. Timeline of prehistoric Scotland

    worked by humans into tools, jewellery etc. O Organic matter Organic material Biofact archaeology Biofact s the dead material of once living organisms. P Pottery Usually shards of broken pot complete ...   more details



  1. Edinburgh Zoo

    to see and feel Biofact biology animal artefacts up close. Most of these artefacts are rare and exotic ...   more details



  1. Archaeology

    About the study of human society the magazine about archaeology Archaeology magazine the album The Rutles Archaeology pp move indef File Dolina Pano 3.jpg thumb right Excavations at the site of Gran Dolina , in the Atapuerca Mountains , Spain, 2008 Archaeology , or archeology ref Citation url http www.saa.org ForthePublic Resources OtherUsefulResources Whyaretheretwodifferentspellingsarchaeology tabid 1078 Default.aspx title Society for American Archaeology date accessdate 2011 01 15 ref from Ancient Greek Greek lang grc , archaiologia   lang grc , arkhaios , ancient and lang grc , logia , logy ref Or science , in old Greek. ref , is the study of human activity, primarily through the recovery and analysis of the material culture and environmental data that they have left behind, which includes Artifact archaeology artifacts , architecture , biofact archaeology biofact s and cultural landscapes the archaeological record . Because archaeology employs a wide range of different procedures, it can be considered to be both a science and a humanities humanity , ref name Renfrew Bahn1991 Renfrew and Bahn 2004 1991 13 ref and in the United States it is thought of as a branch of anthropology , ref name Haviland et al 2005 harvnb Haviland Prins McBride Walrath 2010 p 7,14 ref although in Europe it is viewed as a separate discipline. Archaeology studies human history from the development of the first stone tools in eastern Africa 3.4 million years ago up until recent decades. ref McPherron, S. P., Z. Alemseged, C. W. Marean, J. G. Wynn, D. Reed, D. Geraads, R. Bobe, and H. A. Bearat. 2010. Evidence for stone tool assisted consumption of animal tissues before 3.39 million years ago at Dikika, Ethiopia. Nature 466 857 860 ref Archaeology does not include the discipline of paleontology. It is of most importance for learning about Prehistory prehistoric societies , when there are no written records for historians to study, making up over 99 of total hu ...   more details



  1. List of Puerto Rican scientists and inventors

    data, including architecture , Artifact archaeology artifacts , features, Biofact archaeology biofact s, and cultural landscape landscapes . ref name Renfrew Bahn1991 Renfrew and Bahn 1991 ref ...   more details



  1. Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium

    a shark s scales and the rubbery skin of a stingray. In addition, an educational biofact cart is situated ...   more details



  1. Index of philosophy articles (A?C)

    w Biofact philosophy w Biofacticity w Biographia Literaria w Biographical fallacy w Biological determinism ...   more details



  1. Conservation biology

    Experts Believe we are in the Midst of Fastest Mass Extinction in Earth s History a Biofact from the American ...   more details




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