ylem

Meaning

Noun

Origin

  • Resuscitation of Middle English ylem, from Medieval Latin hȳlem, accusative of hȳlē (whence English hyle), a transliteration of Ancient Greek ὕλη ("wood; material, substance; [[matter#Noun"). The concept of “fundamental matter” – Ancient Greek πρώτη ὕλη – was propounded by the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384–322 ).
  • The term ylem was first used in modern English in the paper “The Origin of Chemical Elements”, coauthored by Russian-American theoretical physicist and cosmologist George Gamow (1904–1968), American cosmologist Ralph Asher Alpher (1921–2007) and German-American nuclear physicist Hans Bethe (1906–2005), published 1 April 1948 in Physical Review. Alpher claimed to have found the word “in a large dictionary”, perhaps Webster’s New International Dictionary (2nd ed., 1934), which he referred to in a second 1948 paper (cited below). In a 1968 interview, Gamow also associated ylem with a Hebrew word he did not name; it remains unclear which word he was referring to.
  • The word ylem reappeared in popular books on science following the discovery in 1964–1965 of the cosmic microwave background, which had been predicted in 1948 by Alpher and Robert Herman (1914–1997), and again after the publication of images of the radiation composed from measurements by two satellites, the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) in 1992 and the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) in 2003.

Modern English dictionary

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