| Medicine - 1848 - 584 pages
...When the brain is said to be essential, as the organ or instrument of the mind in its relations with the external world, not only to the perception of...when you suppose its substance to be ever changing 1 or, how is it that your assumed nutritive change of all the particles of the brain is not as destructive... | |
| Sir James Paget - 1853 - 552 pages
...especially, to the memory of things which have been the objects of sense, — it is asked, how can the brain be the organ of memory when you suppose its substance to be ever cbanging ? or, how is it that your assumed nutritive change of all the particles of the brain is not... | |
| Sir James Paget - Pathology, Surgical - 1854 - 714 pages
...especially, to the memory of things which have been the objects of sense, — it is asked, how can the brain be the organ of memory when you suppose its substance...nutritive change of all the particles of the brain is not aa destructive of all memory and knowledge of sensuous things as the sudden destruction by some great... | |
| Psychiatry - 1857 - 652 pages
...especially to the memory of things which have been the objects of sense, it is asked, How can the brain be the organ of memory, when you suppose its substance...some great injury is? The answer is, because of the exactuess of assimilation accomplished in the formative process. The effect once produced by an impression... | |
| Sir James Paget - 1860 - 730 pages
...to the memory of the things which have been the objects of sense, — it is asked, how can the brain be the organ of memory when you suppose its substance...answer is, — because of the exactness of assimilation accomplished in the formative process : the effect once produced by an impression upon the brain, whether... | |
| Forbes Benignus Winslow - Brain - 1860 - 618 pages
...especially to the memory of things which have been the objects of sense — it is asked, how can the brain be the organ of memory when you suppose its substance...answer is, — because of the exactness of assimilation accomplished in the formative process : the effect once produced by an impression upon the brain, whether... | |
| Forbes Winslow - Brain - 1860 - 618 pages
...sense — it is asked, how can the brain be the organ of memory when you suppose its substance to bo ever changing? or, how is it that your assumed nutritive...knowledge of sensuous things as the sudden destruction by sonic great injury is ? The answer is, — because of the exactness of assimilation accomplished in... | |
| Robert Dunn - 1863 - 100 pages
...the man.'" (The Ninth Bridgwater Treatise, by Chas. Babbage, Esq., pages 108 to 117.) 81 the brain be the organ of memory, when you suppose its substance...nutritive change of all the particles of the brain is not destructive of all memory and knowledge of sensuous things, as the sudden destruction by some great... | |
| Sir James Paget - 1871 - 920 pages
...especially, to the memory of things which have been the objects of sense — it is asked, how can the brain be the organ of memory when you suppose its substance to be ever changing 1 or, how is it that your assumed nutritive change of all the particles of the brain is not as destructive... | |
| George Gore - Chimie, Découvertes - 1878 - 694 pages
...of all sensations may be improved by means of proper discipline. ' If it is asked, How can the brain be the organ of memory, when you suppose its substance...the brain is not as destructive of all memory and all knowledge of sensuous things as their sudden destruction by some great injury is? the answer is,... | |
| |