physiurgic, a. rare.
(fɪzɪˈɜːdʒɪk)
[f. Gr. ϕύσι-ς nature + ἔργον work + -ic: cf. theurgic.]
Produced or acted upon solely by nature.
| 1816 Bentham Chrestom. 187 Applied to bodies..in their natural, or say physiurgic, state—human art—or say elaboration by human art—has two distinguishable objects. 1843 Bowring Introd. Bentham's Wks. i. 16/2 Natural History and Natural Philosophy are respectively represented by Physiurgic Somatology, and Anthropurgic Somatology. |
So physiurgoˈscopic a. rare.
| 1816 Bentham Chrestom. Wks. 1843 VIII. 86 Division of Somatology, or Somatics at large, into Physiurgic (Physiurgoscopic) and Anthropurgic (Anthropurgoscopic). |