It would seem a general rule that reflexes arising in species of receptors which considered as sense-organs provoke strongly affective sensation caeteris paribus prevail over reflexes of other species when in competition with them for the use of the "final... Feeling Pain and Being in Pain, second edition - Page 26by Nikola Grahek - 2011 - 198 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Sir Charles Scott Sherrington - Nervous system - 1906 - 438 pages
...species of receptors which considered as sense-organs provoke strongly affective sensation caeteris paribus prevail over reflexes of other species when...facility reflexes belonging to touch organs, muscular sense-organs, etc. As the sensations evoked by these arcs, eg "pains," exclude and dominate concurrent... | |
| Sir Thomas Clifford Allbutt - 1911 - 946 pages
...more potent than pain reflexes, and Prof. Sherrington rightly affirms " that reflexes arising in the species of receptors which, considered as sense organs,...competition with them for the use of the final common path." If now we examine the effects of painful stimulation of the skin in a decerebrate animal, in which... | |
| Pathology - 1921 - 436 pages
...species of receptors which considered as sense organs produce strongly affective sensations casteris paribus prevail over reflexes of other species when...competition with them for the use of the final common path." If we suppose that the somesthetic neurones are capable of producing stronger excitations than cells... | |
| Carl Emil Seashore - Psychology - 1923 - 442 pages
...species of receptors which considered as sense-organs provoke strongly affective sensation, caeteris paribus, prevail over reflexes of other species when...competition with them for the use of the 'final common path. ' . . . Unlike reflexes have successive but not simultaneous use of the common path. Expressed teleologically,... | |
| Lancelot Thomas Hogben, Frank Robert Winton - Physiology, Comparative - 1924 - 260 pages
...general, Sherrington finds " reflexes arising in species of receptors which considered as sense-organs provoke strongly affective sensations, c<eteris paribus...competition with them for the use of the final common path." " Unlike reflexes have successive but not simultaneous use of the common path; like reflexes mutually... | |
| Ralph Barton Perry - Philosophy, Modern - 1926 - 728 pages
...species of receptors which considered as sense-organs provoke strongly affective sensation caeteris paribus prevail over reflexes of other species when...facility reflexes belonging to touch organs, muscular sense-organs, etc. As the sensations evoked by these arcs, eg, 'pains,' exclude and dominate concurrent... | |
| Sir Charles Scott Sherrington - Nervous system - 1906 - 524 pages
...affective sensation caeteris paribus prevail over reflexes of other species when in competition with thein for the use of the "final common path." Such reflexes...facility reflexes belonging to touch organs, muscular sense-organs, etc. As the sensations evoked by these arcs, eg "pains," exclude and dominate concurrent... | |
| Charles Sherrington - 1952 - 474 pages
...considered as sense-organs provoke strongly affective sensation ceteris paribus prevail over rejlexes of other species when in competition with them for...facility reflexes belonging to touch organs, muscular sense-organs, etc. As the sensations evoked by these arcs, eg 'pains', exclude and dominate concurrent... | |
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