Zoonomia, Vol. I - Or, the Laws of Organic Life by Erasmus Darwin
page 47 of 633 (07%)
page 47 of 633 (07%)
|
pleasure nor pain, we cease to attend to them. Thus whilst I am walking
through that grove before my window, I do not run against the trees or the benches, though my thoughts are strenuously exerted on some other object. This leads us to a distinct knowledge of irritative ideas, for the idea of the tree or bench, which I avoid, exists on my retina, and induces by association the action of certain locomotive muscles; though neither itself nor the actions of those muscles engage my attention. Thus whilst we are conversing on this subject, the tone, note, and articulation of every individual word forms its correspondent irritative idea on the organ of hearing; but we only attend to the associated ideas, that are attached by habit to these irritative ones, and are succeeded by sensation; thus when we read the words "PRINTING-PRESS" we do not attend to the shape, size, or existence of the letters which compose these words, though each of them excites a correspondent irritative motion of our organ of vision, but they introduce by association our idea of the most useful of modern inventions; the capacious reservoir of human knowledge, whose branching streams diffuse sciences, arts, and morality, through all nations and all ages. * * * * * SECT. VIII. OF SENSITIVE MOTIONS. I. 1. _Sensitive muscular motions were originally excited into action by irritation._ 2. _And sensitive sensual motions, ideas of imagination, dreams._ II. 1. _Sensitive muscular motions are occasionally obedient to volition._ 2. _And sensitive sensual motions._ |
|