Body
Encyclopedia : B : BO : BOD : Body
- For other uses, see Body (disambiguation)}}}.
"Body" often is used in connection with appearance, health issues and death. The body of a dead person is also called a corpse, for humans, or cadaver. The dead bodies of vertebrate animals and insects are sometimes called carcasses, and dead viruses are called ghosts.
The human body consists of a head, neck, trunk, two arms, two legs and the genitals of the groin, which differ between males and females.
The study of the working of a body is anatomy.
A body is also a held-together collection or group of physical objects or abstract ideas and, in particular, an organisation of such. The whole is more than the simple sum of the individual members, because the whole contains, in addition, information about the relationships among the elements of the whole. The body of evidence is a phrase which defines the sum total of all knowledge or evidence of some thing.
Body Ecology focuses on the interactions among animals and various microbes living inside them.
Injury
Injury is damage or harm caused to the structure or function of the body caused by an outside agent or force, which may include physical or chemical.
See also
- Physical body
- Antibody
- Battery
- Bodily harm
- Disability
- Disease
- Emergence
- Healing
- Health
- Human physical appearance
- Human body
- Trauma
- Microtrauma
- Autopsy
- Burial
- Cremation
- Death
- Embalming
- Mummy
- Necrophilia
- Respect for the dead
- Dead bodies and health risks
Books
- Anne Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories about Women and Men, 2., revised ed., New York, N.Y : Basic Books, 1992
- Mary Roach, , 2004, Penguin Books Ltd., UK (ISBN 0141007451)
- Jessica Snyder Sachs, Corpse: Nature, Forensics, and the Struggle to Pinpoint Time of Death (ISBN 0738207713)
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