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XXI. Some observations on the functions of the nervous system, and the relation which they bear to the other vital function

Authors :
Alexander Philip Wilson Philip
Source :
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 119:261-278
Publication Year :
1829
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 1829.

Abstract

The experiments relating to the function of digestion detailed or referred to in a paper which I lately had the honour to present to the Society, appear to throw light on the function of the ganglionic nerves, which hold a higher place in the animal economy than those either of sensation merely or voluntary power, being as essentially a vital organ as the heart or lungs, as will more fully appear, I think, from the review of facts which I now beg leave to submit to the Society. For the last fifteen years I have been engaged in an experimental inquiry relating to the laws of the vital functions; and have from time to time laid the results before the Royal Society in six papers, which the Society has done me the honour to publish. All the experiments on which the statements are founded, having been made in the presence of competent witnesses, the rule from which I never deviated, has been to repeat each experiment till no doubt respecting the result remained in the mind of any one present; and it is satis­factory to me to be enabled to state, that, although many of these experiments have been repeated by the physiologists both of this country and the continent, they have in no instance been found inaccurate. I have always abstained from troubling the Society till I had some new facts to state, which appeared to me to deserve its attention; and I have confined myself to the simple statement of the facts and the means by which they were ascertained.

Details

ISSN :
20539223 and 02610523
Volume :
119
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........002c7f896ec3d7414f495e8c22900cf9