It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral action, to suppose that the physical chain ends abruptly in a physical void, occupied by an immaterial substance; which immaterial substance, after working alone, imparts its results to... The Brain as an Organ of Mind - Page 154by H. Charlton Bastian - 1880 - 708 lehteFull view - About this book
| 1867 - 796 lehte
...circle of sensation, emotion, and thought. It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral action, to suppose that the physical chain...substance, after working alone, imparts its results to the otner edge of the physical break, and determines the active response — two shores of the material... | |
| Sir George Grove, David Masson, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - 1867 - 552 lehte
...circle of sensation, emotion, and thought. It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral action, to suppose that the physical chain...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial. There is, in fact, no rupture of nervous continuity. The only tenable supposition is, that mental and... | |
| Balfour Stewart - 1874 - 274 lehte
...circle of sensation, emotion, and thought. It would be incompatible with every thing we know of the cerebral action to suppose that the physical chain...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial. There is, in fact, no rupture of nervous continuity. The only tenable supposition is, that mental and... | |
| Alexander Bain - 1874 - 232 lehte
...is an unbroken physical circle of effects. It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral action, to suppose that the physical chain...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial. There is, in fact, no rupture of nervous continuity. The only tenable supposition is, that mental and... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1874 - 542 lehte
...physical circle of effects. It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral actions to suppose that the physical chain ends abruptly in...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial." Now remembering that movements of all kinds are physical facts, have their place in the " unbroken... | |
| 1874 - 788 lehte
...physical circle of effects. It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral actions to suppose that the physical chain ends abruptly in...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial." Now remembering that* movements of all kinds are physical facts, have their place in the "unbroken... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1874 - 546 lehte
...physical circle of effects. It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral actions to suppose that the physical chain ends abruptly in...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial." Now remembering that movements of all kinds are physical facts, have their place in the "unbroken material... | |
| Henry Allon - 1874 - 764 lehte
...Body ' : — ' It would be incompatible with everything we know of the cerebral action to supposethat the physical chain ends abruptly in a physical void,...material, with an intervening ocean of the immaterial. There is, in fact, no rupture of nervous continuity.' — P. 181. But if, on these grounds, it is impossible,... | |
| Balfour Stewart - 1874 - 264 lehte
...circle of sensation, emotion, and thought. It would be incompatible with every thing we know of the cerebral action to suppose that the physical chain...occupied by an immaterial substance ; which immaterial snbstance, after working alone, imparts its results to the other edge of the physical break, and determines... | |
| Balfour Stewart - 1875 - 256 lehte
...circle of sensation, emotion, and thought. It would be incompatible with every thing we know of the cerebral action to suppose that the physical chain...material with an intervening ocean of the immaterial. There is, in fact, no rupture of nervous continuity. The only tenable supposition is, that mental and... | |
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