Physiological Researches Upon Life and DeathSmith & Maxwell, 1809 - 300 Seiten |
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... remarkable modifications . The one is common to vegetable and animal , the other is peculiar to the last . Let us cast our eyes , for example , on an individual of each of these living kingdoms : we shall see that the one exists only ...
... remarkable modifications . The one is common to vegetable and animal , the other is peculiar to the last . Let us cast our eyes , for example , on an individual of each of these living kingdoms : we shall see that the one exists only ...
Seite 8
... remarkable for its regular form ; its pairs resemble each other on every side , such as the bed of the optic nerves , the corpora striata , the hippocampi , and the corpora fimbriata . Those parts not in pairs are all symmetrically ...
... remarkable for its regular form ; its pairs resemble each other on every side , such as the bed of the optic nerves , the corpora striata , the hippocampi , and the corpora fimbriata . Those parts not in pairs are all symmetrically ...
Seite 9
... remarkable , in these varieties the disposition of one side , never affects that of the other . The organs of respiration appear at first sight to be per- fectly regular ; if it is observed , however , that the right bronchia differs ...
... remarkable , in these varieties the disposition of one side , never affects that of the other . The organs of respiration appear at first sight to be per- fectly regular ; if it is observed , however , that the right bronchia differs ...
Seite 11
... each other , of which the kidneys and lungs afford an example . I shall not search for the cause of this remarkable dif- ference which in man and some other animals , distinguish the organs of the two lives ; I shall merely 11.
... each other , of which the kidneys and lungs afford an example . I shall not search for the cause of this remarkable dif- ference which in man and some other animals , distinguish the organs of the two lives ; I shall merely 11.
Seite 23
... remarkable difference in the two symmetrical halves of the body is not then , naturally , an exception to the ge- neral law of harmony of action in the external functions . This is so true that the totality of our motions is so much the ...
... remarkable difference in the two symmetrical halves of the body is not then , naturally , an exception to the ge- neral law of harmony of action in the external functions . This is so true that the totality of our motions is so much the ...
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affection agitated animals with red aorta appears arteries ARTICLE asphixia auricle black blood blood communicates bodies brain capillary carotid cause ceases to act centre cerebral action cerebral nerves cessation chymical phenomena circulation cock colour commences communication connexion consequently considerations contact of black contrary degree destroyed diaphragm digestion excitement exercise exhalation exist experiments external faculty fluid fœtus ganglions habit heart with red impression influence injection intercostal intercostal muscles internal functions interruption intestines irritability latter less lives lungs lungs exercises manner mechanical phenomena membranes mode motions mucous nature nerves numerous nutrition observed organic contractibility organs of animal pain particularly passions penetrated perfection pheno phrenic nerves portion principle produced prove pulmonary quantity receive red blood remarkable respiration seat SECTION sensations senses sensibility serous membranes sometimes species spleen stomach sudden suddenly sympathetic texture thoracic ganglion tion trachea trachea-arteria truncs vascular system veins venous ventricle vessels violent viscera vital powers voluntary muscles
Beliebte Passagen
Seite iv - Co. of the said district, have deposited in this office the title of a book, the right whereof they claim as proprietors, in the words following, to wit : " Tadeuskund, the Last King of the Lenape. An Historical Tale." In conformity to the Act of the Congress of the United States...
Seite iv - An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the times therein mentioned." And also to the act, entitled " An Act supplementary to an Act, entitled, " An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the time therein mentioned," and extending the benefits thereof to the arts of designing, engraving, and...
Seite 37 - ... in 1800. Bichat's views seem so relevant to the present discussion that it may be appropriate to conclude with their quotation: "The action of the mind on each feeling of pain or pleasure, arising from a sensation, consists in a comparison between that sensation and those which have preceded it. The greater the difference between the actual and past impressions, the more ardent will be the feeling. That sensation would affect us most which we had never experienced before. "It follows, therefore,...
Seite 113 - fundamental law of the distribution of vital powers . . . that when they are increased in one part, they are diminished in all the rest of the living economy...
Seite 37 - ... frequency of their repetition, because the comparison becomes less sensible between their past and actual state. Every time that we see an object, hear a sound, or taste a dish, we find less difference between what we experience and what we have experienced. "The nature of pleasure and of pain is thus to destroy themselves, to cease to exist, because they have existed. The art of prolonging the duration of our enjoyments consists in varying their causes.
Seite 66 - The one constantly varying in their intenseness, energy, and development, often pass with rapidity from the lowest degree of prostration to the highest point of exaltation...
Seite 45 - ... immediate effects of the emotions and passions upon the organic system. He says : " Strict observation proves to us that the parts subservient to the internal functions are constantly affected by them, and are ever determined according to the state in which they may be. The effect of every kind of passion is to produce some change, some alteration in organic life. Anger accelerates the circulation, and increases, often in an incommensurable proportion, the effort of the heart ; it is on the force,...
Seite 55 - ... excito-motory and reflex action, which, as we shall see, is the parent of this theory. But again, says he, " Perhaps the internal organs do not act upon the voluntary muscles by the intermediate excitement of the brain, but by direct nervous communications; how they act' is of no consequence, * * what is most essential, is the fact itself; what is evidently in support of it, is, on the one part, the affection of an internal organ by the passions; on the other part the determinate motion to this...
Seite 65 - ... which bear the character of vitality, have been alternately the common base on which have rested all physiological explanations. These bases have been successively overturned, and among their ruins the facts alone remain which a rigorous experience of sensibility and mobility furnish. Such, indeed, are the narrow limits of the human understanding, that the knowledge of first causes is almost always denied to it. The thick veil which covers them, envelops in its innumerable folds whoever attempts...
Seite 46 - Respiration has a no less immediate dependence on the passions ; those suffocations, that oppression, the sudden effect of profound grief, do they not indicate some remarkable change, some sudden alteration in the lungs ? In the long catalogue of chronic diseases, or of acute affections, the sad attribute of the pulmonary system, are we not often obliged to trace the different passions of the patient to discover the principle of his disease ? " In another chapter he shows the influence of the mental...