Homunculus

Had any of you heard of the Zika virus before about a month ago? I sure hadn’t. But now, understandably, it’s all over the news. I always find this quite disconcerting, when information seems to pop up everywhere all at once, fully formed, as if there’s this mind-speak going on, and we all have the…

Had any of you heard of the Zika virus before about a month ago? I sure hadn’t. But now, understandably, it’s all over the news. I always find this quite disconcerting, when information seems to pop up everywhere all at once, fully formed, as if there’s this mind-speak going on, and we all have the same thoughts at the same moment.

I remember the exact day when credit card swipe machines appeared at cash registers. The day before I ran several errands and no one had them. The next day, every store I went to had them, and the first one had to instruct me how to operate this newfangled contraption. It was as though the entire world turned a financial corner simultaneously, and these machines popped up like mushrooms overnight.

It was the same thing with tilapia. One day I didn’t even know such a fish existed, and the next, it was displayed prominently in the grocery store and on a restaurant menu, and after that it seemed like you couldn’t sling a dead cat without hitting a tilapia.

I was thinking about all this last night because I couldn’t sleep, and that brought on the vague memory of an old belief that it’s possible to be born as a fully formed (albeit tiny) human being. So of course I googled it (and that made for some weird search terms) and came across this Wikipedia article on the homunculus.

Sure enough, in the 16th century, some people believed that a man’s sperm contained itty-bitty, teeny-weenie versions of that man, each one called a homunculus, and he simply planted them inside the woman and one would grow. (Of course, that didn’t explain why children often looked a great deal like their mothers, but this fact was conveniently overlooked.)

So there you have it. The Zika virus was not the first fully-formed thing to spring from the mind of man. Kind of makes you wonder what’s coming next. I hope whatever it is is a triumph, not a tragedy.

(Incidentally, I learned something else that is totally weird while researching the homunculus, but it deserves a blog entry all its own. Stay tuned tomorrow!)

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[Image credit: wikipedia.org]

11 responses to “Homunculus”

  1. When information seems to pop up everywhere all at once, fully formed…it feels like manipulation to accept or fear a thing before the theories and data have been cross checked and verified. Wonder how long it took before enough facts dispelled the homunculus manipulation. 🙂

    1. It was probably the first person who said, “Uh… if your sperm is a little tiny version of you, why did the baby become a girl?”

      1. Their explanation for that… the homunculus assimilated maternal characteristics from the womb environment. But they had it backwards. http://www.menshealth.com/health/3-signs-you-started-as-a-girl If we all began as females, does this mean men are mutations? 🙂

      2. Mutants! That explains all these guys I’ve met on the internet dating websites!

  2. Some info which pops up is fun and interesting! In this centennial year of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, Seattle’s historical groups will bring out some crazy historical trivia. I thought of you on Saturday when I was in Fremont trying to take photos of the bridge and the canal!

    1. Ooh, I’d love to see those photos!

      1. I took a couple of photos and put them on my article about John Ross, a pioneer of Fremont. I tried to find the spot on the canal closest to where he lived, and while I was standing there a girl’s crew rowed past me in the canal. Then I went to the bridge and found a piece of artwork I had not noticed before next to Yellow Dot Cafe. I will be writing more articles about Fremont so stay tuned!

  3. […] doesn’t that sound like the name of a really bad horror movie sequel? Au contraire. Yesterday I wrote about the 16th century concept that a man’s sperm consisted of microscopic fully-formed humans. […]

  4. making me think again… stop it…

    1. Sorry about that. 🙂

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