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    MECHANICS, BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE AND THE CHALLENGES OF METAMECHANICS: A PERSONAL REFLECTION

    A brief retrospective of the evolution of mechanics and its reciprocal impacts on medicine and biology is offered, from the limited viewpoint of an early contributor to some aspects of biomechanics. The development of the field after World War II, and particularly in the nineteen sixties and seventies, set the foundation for today's remarkable achievements. Looking ahead, the expanding complexity and challenges of the interaction of mechanics with biology and medicine, together with the loss of centrality of the mechanistic view in the physical sciences, compel a reexamination of the role, potential and limits of mechanics in this context. Future advances call for a broader metamechanics conception encompassing forces, energies, fields, information, network and systems theory, as well as for models spanning the range of scales from atom and molecule to cell, organ and organism.