Breathing
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Breathing transports oxygen into the body and carbon dioxide out of the body. Aerobic organisms require oxygen to create energy via respiration, in the form of energy-rich molecules such as glucose. The medical term for normal relaxed breathing is eupnoea. Organisms breathe to avoid death from asphyxiation.
Cultural significance
Ancients commonly linked the breath to a life force. The Hebrew Bible refers to God breathing the breath of life into clay to make Adam a living soul (nephesh). It also refers to the breath as returning to God when a mortal dies. The terms "spirit," "qi," "prana" and "psyche" are related to the concept of breath. Also cognate are Polynesian Mana and Hebrew ruach.
In t'ai chi ch'uan, aerobic training is combined with breathing to exercise the diaphragm muscles and to train effective posture, which both make better use of the body's energy. In music, breath is used to play wind instruments and many aerophones. Laughter, physically, is simply repeated sharp breaths. Hiccups, yawns, and sneezes are other breath-related phenomena.
Common phrases in English relate to breathing e.g. "catch my breath", "took my breath away".
Namesakes
- Loss of Breath, a story by Edgar Allan Poe
- Breathless, a film by
See also
- Apnea (suspension of breathing)
- Breath gas analysis
- Diaphragmatic breathing
- Kussmaul breathing
- Agonal breathing
- Cheyne-Stokes respiration
- Biot's respiration
- Inspiration
- Mouth breathing
- Nose breathing
- Pneuma
- Prana
- Qi
- Respiratory rate
- Spirit
- Halitosis
- Liquid breathing
- Carbon cycle
- Buteyko method