For every act of memory, every exercise of bodily aptitude, every habit, recollection, train of ideas, there is a specific grouping or co-ordination of sensations and movements, by virtue of specific growths in the cell functions. Mind and body - Página 91por Alexander Bain - 1875 - 196 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Charles Bray - 1866 - 182 páginas
...and the memory of youth returns. Mr. A. Bain makes memory to depend on " specific growth;" he says, "For every act of memory, every exercise of bodily...virtue of specific growths in the cell junctions, and of separate nervous growths for each new and separate acquisition." * * The Intellect viewed Physiologically.... | |
| 1867 - 600 páginas
...any other manner, than can be assigned/' Again, he says: — "For every act of memory, every exorcise of bodily aptitude, every habit, recollection, train...virtue of specific growths in the cell junctions." ART. 50. — Defects of Smell in Epilepliform Seizures, in Mental Affections, £c. By J. HCGHLINGS... | |
| John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell - 1871 - 844 páginas
...manner, as the original feeling, and in no other parts nor in any other manner that can be assigned .... For every act of memory, every exercise of bodily aptitude, every habit, train of ideas, recollection, there is a specific grouping or co-ordination of sensations or movements,... | |
| Charles Lunn - 1874 - 84 páginas
...distances in sound — in brief, people virtually start with an induced error and pay to add a fresh one. " For every act of memory, every exercise of bodily...and movements, by virtue of specific growths in the celljunctions." * Being so, right work consists in going back to first principles, as shown in infant... | |
| Robert Lewis Dabney - 1875 - 388 páginas
...and contradict himself: On page gist he asserts (without proof) that " for every act of memory, .... there is a specific grouping or coordination of sensations...and movements, by virtue of specific growths in the cell-junctions." If so, there must be a direct proportion between the number of these material junctioncells... | |
| Malcolm Guthrie - 1882 - 506 páginas
...some other incident force or not, Dr. Bain does not say. This, however, seems to be all preliminary. " And now, as to the mechanism of Retention. " For every...movements, by virtue of specific growths in the cell functions." The proof of this proposition seems to be its general probability :— First, From the... | |
| Malcolm Guthrie - 1882 - 500 páginas
...not say. This, however, seems to be all preliminary. " And now, as to the mechanism of Eetention. " For every act of memory, every exercise of bodily...movements, by virtue of specific growths in the cell functions." The proof of this proposition seems to be its general probability : — First, From the... | |
| 1881 - 340 páginas
...instance, Mr. Bain describes the (hypothetical) "mechanism of retention" (Mind and Body, p. 91) : "By every act of memory, every exercise of bodily aptitude,...specific grouping, or co-ordination of sensations and movement, by virtue of specific growth in the cell functions." This theory might be less startling,... | |
| William Kirkus - 1886 - 400 páginas
...hundreds of times before, we can now recollect almost without an effort. To quote Dr. Bain again (p. 91): "As to the mechanism of retention : for every act...and movements by virtue of specific growths in the cell-junctions." Now, cells are real things. Dr. Bain gives diagrams of them. The brain of a boy eight... | |
| Salem Wilder - 1886 - 368 páginas
...by Bain. To further explain I will quote from Bain, " Mind and Body," extracts from pp. 91, 93, 94. "For every act of memory, every exercise of bodily...virtue of specific growths in the cell junctions." "In the next place, Acquisition has a limit, determined by the amount of the nervous substance, that... | |
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