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Lorenz Oken : ウィキペディア英語版
Lorenz Oken

Lorenz Oken (1 August 1779 – 11 August 1851) was a German naturalist, botanist, biologist, and ornithologist.
Oken was born Lorenz Okenfuss ((ドイツ語:Okenfuß)) in Bohlsbach (now part of Offenburg), Ortenau, Baden, and studied natural history and medicine at the universities of Freiburg and Würzburg. He went on to the University of Göttingen, where he became a ''Privatdozent'' (unsalaried lecturer), and shortened his name to Oken. As Lorenz Oken, he published a small work entitled ''Grundriss der Naturphilosophie, der Theorie der Sinne, mit der darauf gegründeten Classification der Thiere'' (1802). This was the first of a series of works which established him as a leader of the movement of "Naturphilosophie" in Germany.
In it he extended to physical science the philosophical principles which Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) had applied to epistemology and morality. Oken had been preceded in this by Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814), who, acknowledging that Kant had discovered the materials for a universal science, declared that all that was needed was a systematic coordination of these materials. Fichte undertook this task in his "Doctrine of Science" (''Wissenschaftslehre''), whose aim was to construct all knowledge by ''a priori'' means. This attempt, which was merely sketched out by Fichte, was further elaborated by the philosopher Friedrich Schelling (1775–1854). Oken built on Schelling's work, producing a synthesis of what he held Schelling to have achieved.
Oken produced the seven-volume series ''Allgemeine Naturgeschichte für alle Stände'', with engravings by Johann Susemihl (1767–1847), and published in Stuttgart by Hoffman between 1839 and 184l.〔(Biodiversity Heritage Library )〕
==New system of animal classification==
In the ''Grundriss der Naturphilosophie'' of 1802 Oken sketched the outlines of the scheme he afterwards devoted himself to perfecting. The position advanced in that work, to which he continued to adhere, is that "the animal classes are virtually nothing else than a representation of the sense-organs, and that they must be arranged in accordance with them." Consequently, Oken contended that there are only five animal classes:
#Dermatozoa, or invertebrates
#Glossozoa, or fish, those animals in which a true tongue makes, for the first time, its appearance
#Rhinozoa, or reptiles, in which the nose opens for the first time into the mouth and inhales air
#Otozoa, or birds, in which the ear for the first time opens externally
#Ophthalmozoa, or mammals, in which all the organs of sense are present and complete, the eyes being movable and covered with lids.
In 1805 Oken made a further advance in the application of the ''a priori'' principle in a book on generation (''Die Zeugung''), in which he maintained that "all organic beings originate from and consist of vesicles or cells. These vesicles, when singly detached and regarded in their original process of production, are the infusorial mass or protoplasma (''Urschleim'') whence all larger organisms fashion themselves or are evolved. Their production is therefore nothing else than a regular agglomeration of Infusoria—not, of course, of species already elaborated or perfect, but of mucous vesicles or points in general, which first form themselves by their union or combination into particular species."
A year after the production of this treatise, Oken developed his system one stage further, and in a volume published in 1806, written with the assistance of Dietrich von Kieser (1779–1862), entitled ''Beiträge zur vergleichenden Zoologie, Anatomie, und Physiologie'', he demonstrated that the intestines originate from the umbilical vesicle, and that this corresponds to the vitelius or yolk-bag. Caspar Wolff (1735–1794) had previously claimed to demonstrate this fact in the chick (''Theoria Generationis'', 1774), but he did not see its application as evidence of a general law. Oken showed the importance of the discovery as an illustration of his system. In the same work Oken described and recalled attention to the corpora Wolffiana, or "primordial kidneys."

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