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" ... Physiology has sufficiently decisive grounds for the opinion, that every motion, every manifestation of force, is the result of a transformation of the structure or of its substance ; that every conception, every mental affection, is followed by changes... "
Annals of Electricity, Magnetism, and Chemistry: And Guardian of ... - Page 72
1842
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The Intellectual repository for the New Church. (July/Sept. 1817 ...

New Church gen. confer - 1848 - 494 pages
...every mental affection, is followed by changes in the chymical nature of the secreted fluids ; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by a change in the composition of the substances of the brain." Here is recognised an involuntary correspondential action of the soul upon...
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The London and Edinburgh Monthly Journal of Medical Science, Volume 2

1842 - 1224 pages
...faculties of locomotion and sensation — faculties acting through a nervous apparatus. The true vegetable life of animals is in no way dependent upon this apparatus,...applied in the increase of the mass of a structure, (that is, in nutrition,) or it is applied in the replacement of a structure wasted, (that is, in reproduction.)...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 70

1842 - 788 pages
...every menial affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the jsecreted fluids ; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by...in the composition of the substance of the brain. ' In order to keep up the phenomena of life in animals, certain matters are required, parts of organisms,...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 70

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1842 - 558 pages
...esery menial affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the jecreted fluids ; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by...in the composition of the substance of the. brain. ' In order to keep up the phenomena of life in animals, certain matters are required, parts of organisms,...
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The Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery, Volume 6

1842 - 1106 pages
...affection is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids, and every thought and every sensation is accompanied by a change in the composition of the substance of the brain. The first conditions of animal life are nutritious matters and • t oxygen introduced into the system;...
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The Year-book of Facts in Science and Art

Charles W. Vincent, James Mason - 1843 - 468 pages
...energetic volition is incapable of exerting any influence on the contractions of the heart, on the motions of the intestines, or on the processes of secretion....applied in the increase of the mass of a structure, (that is, in nutrition,) or it is applied in the replacement of a structure wasted, (that is, in reproduction.)...
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Transactions of the Pharmaceutical Meetings, Volume 2

1843 - 812 pages
...every mental affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids ; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by...in the composition of the substance of the brain." Thus the living animal is presented to us in the character of an apparatus, in which a succession of...
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The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England

Royal Agricultural Society - 1843 - 664 pages
...every mental affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids ; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by...in the composition of the substance of the brain." body, that moment the Chemical forces begin the work of demolition on the unprotected part. Thus, if...
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Chemistry in Its Application to Agriculture and Physiology

Justus Freiherr von Liebig, Lyon Playfair Baron Playfair - 1843 - 260 pages
...every mental affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by...in the composition of the substance of the brain. In order to keep up the phenomena of life in animals, certain matters are required, parts of organisms,...
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Lecture on physical and intellectual life

Samuel Wright - 1843 - 74 pages
...every mental affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids ; that every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by...in the composition of the substance of the brain"* To refute such a crazy conjecture by direct facts, is as little possible as worth while ; but at least...
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