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Organic   /ɔrgˈænɪk/   Listen
Organic

adjective
1.
Relating or belonging to the class of chemical compounds having a carbon basis.  Antonym: inorganic.
2.
Being or relating to or derived from or having properties characteristic of living organisms.  "Organic growth" , "Organic remains found in rock"  Antonym: inorganic.
3.
Involving or affecting physiology or bodily organs.  Antonym: functional.
4.
Of or relating to foodstuff grown or raised without synthetic fertilizers or pesticides or hormones.  "Organic vegetables" , "Organic chicken"
5.
Simple and healthful and close to nature.
6.
Constitutional in the structure of something (especially your physical makeup).  Synonyms: constituent, constitutional, constitutive.
noun
1.
A fertilizer that is derived from animal or vegetable matter.  Synonyms: organic fertiliser, organic fertilizer.



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"Organic" Quotes from Famous Books



... supposition that Sir W. Hamilton held that we are directly percipient of primary qualities in external bodies. Strictly speaking, however, Hamilton held that the primary qualities are immediately perceived only in our organism as extended, and inferred to exist in extra-organic bodies. The external world is immediately apprehended only in its secundo-primary character, as resisting our locomotive energy. But as the organism, in this theory, is a material non-ego equally with the rest of matter, and as to press this distinction would ...
— The Philosophy of the Conditioned • H. L. Mansel

... race is an organic whole. The individual man is more intimately united to every other man, and to all past and coming generations, than the leaf which flutters on the twig of a great tree is connected with the tree itself, and with ...
— Parish Papers • Norman Macleod

... a small amount of subsidence subsequent to its deposition. At Pernambuco (latitude 8 degrees S.), in the alluvial or tertiary cliffs, surrounding the low land on which the city stands, I looked in vain for organic remains, or other evidence ...
— South American Geology - also: - Title: Geological Observations On South America • Charles Darwin

... as man observes phenomena, he thinks that he perceives, between Nature and God, intermediaries; such as relations of number, form, and succession; organic laws, evolutions, analogies,— forming an unmistakable series of manifestations which invariably produce or give rise to each other. He even observes that, in the development of this society of which he is a part, private wills and associative deliberations ...
— The Philosophy of Misery • Joseph-Pierre Proudhon

... men in pure and noble races. Sin consigns the souls to the lower regions, in the bodies of animals, in plants, even into masses of lifeless matter. For—according to the Jaina doctrine—souls exist not only in organic structures, but also in apparently dead masses, in stones, in lumps of earth, in drops of water, in fire and in wind. Through union with bodies the nature of the soul is affected. In the mass of matter the light of its intelligence ...
— On the Indian Sect of the Jainas • Johann George Buehler


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