| 1866 - 802 páginas
...fairly considered as exceptional, any more than can mere touch. As Professor Tyndall himself observes, ' it is the motion excited by sugar in the nerves of...produces the sensation of sweetness, while bitterness ia the result of the motion produced by aloes.' All sense is, therefore, a sort of motion, though all... | |
| John Tyndall - 1867 - 372 páginas
...nerves be severed, however serious the hurt may be, no pain is experienced. We have the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...in the olfactory nerves by the effluvium of a rose, which announces itself in the brain as the odour of the rose. It is the motion imparted by the sunbeams... | |
| John Tyndall - 1867 - 364 páginas
...be severed, however serious the hurt may be, no pain is experienced. We feave the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...It is the motion excited by sugar in the nerves of 1;aste which, transmitted to the brain, produces the sensation of sweetness, while bitterness is the... | |
| 1868 - 516 páginas
...forces are mutually correlative and convertible. He maintains that our sensations proceed from motion ; that what the nerves convey to the brain is in all cases motion : but this is a motion, not of the whole, it is a vibration or tremor of the molecules or smallest... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool - 1869 - 414 páginas
...which run from the finger to the brain convey intelligence of the injury. We have the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...cases motion. It is the motion excited by sugar in the nerve of taste, which, transmitted to the brain, produces the sensation of sweetness, while bitterness... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool - 1869 - 414 páginas
...which run from the finger to the brain convey intelligence of the injury. We have the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...cases motion. It is the motion excited by sugar in the nerve of taste, which, transmitted to the brain, produces the sensation of sweetness, while bitterness... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool - 1869 - 416 páginas
...which run from the finger to the brain convey intelligence of the injury. We have the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...cases motion. It is the motion excited by sugar in the nerve of taste, which, transmitted to the brain, produces the sensation of sweetness, while bitterness... | |
| Frederick A. Laing - 1873 - 262 páginas
...nerves be severed, however serious the hurt may be, no pain is experienced. We have the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...in the olfactory nerves by the effluvium of a rose, which announces itself in the brain as the odour of the rose. It is the motion imparted by the sunbeams... | |
| John Tyndall - 1875 - 466 páginas
...nerves be severed, however serious the hurt may be, no pain is experienced. We have the strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain is in all cases motion. The motion here meant is not, however, that of the nerve as a whole, but of its molecules or smallest... | |
| Mary Olmstead Stanton - 1879 - 378 páginas
...the auditory nerve to the brain, where it announces itself as sound. We have the; strongest reason for believing that what the nerves convey to the brain...to the brain, produces the sensation of sweetness. The motion here meant is not of the nerves as a whole; it is the vibration or tremors of the molecules,... | |
| |