The adjective 'vital' entered English in the late fourteenth century from Old French 'vital,' from Latin 'vītālis' (of or belonging to life, vital, life-giving), derived from 'vīta' (life), itself from 'vīvere' (to live), tracing to Proto-Indo-European *gʷeyh₃- (to live). The Latin noun 'vīta' is the source of an enormous English vocabulary cluster: 'vital,' 'vitality,' 'vitalize,' 'vitamin,' and the curriculum vitae (course of life) that academics use to document their careers.
In its oldest English sense, 'vital' means 'relating to or sustaining life.' The 'vital organs' — heart, brain, lungs, liver, kidneys — are those without which life cannot continue. 'Vital signs' — pulse, respiration rate, blood pressure, temperature — are the measurable indicators of whether someone is alive and how their body is functioning. 'Vital statistics' originally meant records of births
The sense shift from 'relating to life' to 'absolutely essential' is logical: if something is vital to your survival, it is the most important thing there is. This expanded meaning dominates modern usage. 'It is vital that we act now' does not literally mean 'our lives depend on it' (usually), but the urgency conveyed by 'vital' draws its force from the original, literal meaning. A 'vital distinction' is one that matters fundamentally; a 'vital interest' is one that cannot be compromised. The word imports the gravity of life-and-death into contexts that may be less extreme but are presented as equally
The third sense — full of energy, lively — connects to a different aspect of the Latin root. A 'vital' person is one who seems intensely alive, whose energy and enthusiasm are palpable. This sense is close to 'vivacious' (from Latin 'vīvāx,' long-lived, tenacious of life) and 'vivid' (from Latin 'vīvidus,' full of life). All three words derive from 'vīvere' and describe qualities associated with abundant life: energy
The philosophical concept of 'vitalism' — the theory that living organisms are fundamentally different from non-living matter because they possess a 'vital force' or 'life force' that cannot be reduced to physics and chemistry — was influential from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. Vitalists argued that something beyond the laws of physics animated living things — an 'élan vital,' in Henri Bergson's term. The opposing view — mechanism — held that life could be fully explained by physical and chemical processes. The synthesis of urea by Friedrich Wöhler in 1828, producing an organic compound from inorganic materials, is often cited as the beginning
The word 'vitamin' — one of the most commercially successful coinages in the history of science — was created by the Polish biochemist Casimir Funk in 1912. Funk was studying beriberi, a disease caused by thiamine (vitamin B₁) deficiency, and proposed the term 'vitamine' for the class of essential nutritional substances: 'vita' (life) + 'amine' (a nitrogen-containing organic compound). When it was discovered that not all vitamins are amines, the 'e' was dropped, but the 'vita-' element persisted. The word succeeded
The Latin root 'vīta' (life) appears directly in several English expressions. The 'curriculum vitae' (CV) — literally 'the course of life' — is a document summarizing a person's educational and professional history. 'Aqua vitae' (water of life) was the medieval Latin term for distilled spirits, particularly brandy and whiskey. The Gaelic equivalent, 'uisce beatha' (water of life), became 'usquebaugh' and eventually 'whiskey.' The Scandinavian 'aquavit' preserves the Latin directly. In each case, the idea is the same: the liquid that makes you feel
The PIE root *gʷeyh₃- (to live) underwent dramatically different sound changes in its Greek and Latin descendants. The initial *gʷ- became 'b-' in Greek (giving 'bios,' life) and 'v-' in Latin (giving 'vīvere,' to live, and 'vīta,' life). This means that 'biology' and 'vital,' though they look nothing alike, are cognate — descended from the same prehistoric word. The study of life ('bio-logy') and the quality of being essential to life ('vital') are etymological siblings, separated by thousands of years