| Edwin Davies (D.D.) - 1861 - 286 pages
...unorganized matter, loses its condition of life, and must be again renewed." Physiologists have said, that " every conception, every mental affection, is...thought, every sensation, is accompanied by a change in particle of the body buried; while the philosopie Locke, Archbishop Tillotson, and many others, have... | |
| Martyn Paine - 1862 - 1178 pages
...air, and its combination with certain parts of the animal body." — LIEBIG'S Animal Chemistry. 5. " Physiology has sufficiently decisive grounds for the opinion, that EVERY MOTION, EVERY MANI-. FESTATION OF FORCE, IS THE RESULT OF A TRANSFORMATION OF THE STRUCTURE OR OF ITS SUBSTANCE ;... | |
| Daniel Hack Tuke - 1872 - 602 pages
...secretions are much more frequent in emotional than purely ideational states. Still, as Liebig says, " Every conception, every mental affection, is followed...changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids ; and every thought, every sensation, is accompanied by a change in the composition of the substance... | |
| 1873 - 184 pages
...manifestation of force , is the result of the transformation of the structure, or of its substance; every conception, every mental affection, is followed...changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids. Every thought, every sensation is accompanied by a change in the composition of the substance of the... | |
| Edward Isidore Sears - 1876 - 424 pages
...thought, every sensation, is accompanied by a change in the composition of the substance of the brain; that every motion, every manifestation of force, is...transformation of the structure, or of its substance." f This, it will be admitted, is abundantly materialistic ; sufficiently demonstrative of the fact that,... | |
| John Guthrie - 1877 - 368 pages
...transformed into unorganised matter, loses its condition of life, and must be again renewed. Physiology Las sufficiently decisive grounds for the opinion, that...result of a transformation of the structure or of its substances; that every conception, every mental affection, is followed by changes in the chemical nature... | |
| Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1877 - 688 pages
...thought, every sensation is accompanied by a change in the composition of the substance of the brain ; that every motion, every manifestation of force is...transformation of the structure or of its substance. * Thus, throughout the sensational lectures of Tyndall, we can trace, almost to a page, the whole of... | |
| Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1877 - 696 pages
...is accompanied by » change in the composition of the substance of the brain ; that every mo tion, every manifestation of force is the result of a transformation of the structure or of its substance. * Thus, throughout the sensational lectures of Tyndall, we can trace, almost to a page, the whole of... | |
| John Dempster Bell - 1878 - 482 pages
...chemical action which the elements of the food and the oxygen of the atmosphere exercise on each other." " Physiology has sufficiently decisive grounds for the...transformation of the structure or of its substance." PROFESSOR MULDER. — "Any one who imagines that there is anything else in action in living beings... | |
| State Medical Society of Wisconsin - 1879 - 706 pages
...which is pretty sure to grow by what it feeds upon. If, as asserted by Liebig, every conception and every mental affection is followed by changes in the chemical nature of the secreted fluids, and to the intellectual we add the much more marked disturbances from emotional states, we have in... | |
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