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From the described experiment it is clear that the mere act of eating, the food even not reaching the stomach, determines the stimulation of the gastric glands.
Ivan Pavlov
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Ivan Pavlov
Age: 87 †
Born: 1849
Born: January 1
Died: 1936
Died: January 1
Chemist
Neurologist
Physician
Physiologist
Pavlov Ivan
Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
Even
Stomach
Gastric
Reaching
Swag
Experiments
Glands
Determine
Swagger
Mere
Stimulation
Eating
Determines
Food
Described
Clear
Experiment
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Men are apt to be much more influenced by words than by the actual facts of the surrounding reality
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Don't become a mere recorder of facts, but try to penetrate the mystery of their origin.
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Science demands from a man all his life. If you had two lives that would not be enough for you. Be passionate in your work and in your searching.
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Learn, compare, collect the facts!
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I am convinced that an important stage of human thought will have been reached when the physiological and the psychological, the objective and the subjective, are actually united, when the tormenting conflicts or contradictions between my consciousness and my body will have been factually resolved or discarded.
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While you are experimenting, do not remain content with the surface of things.
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Edible substances evoke the secretion of thick, concentrated saliva. Why? The answer, obviously, is that this enables the mass of food to pass smoothly through the tube leading from the mouth into the stomach.
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As we have seen, bread, and especially dry bread, evokes secretion of considerably larger quantities of saliva than meat.
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Perfect as the wing of a bird may be, it will never enable the bird to fly if unsupported by the air. Facts are the air of science. Without them a man of science can never rise.
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The physiologist who succeeds in penetrating deeper and deeper into the digestive canal becomes convinced that it consists of a number of chemical laboratories equipped with various mechanical devices.
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In the case of the stomach, however, the nerves of the glandular cells were always severed when constructing an artificially isolated pouch and this, naturally, affected the normal work of the stomach.
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As was to be expected, the discovery of the nervous apparatus of the salivary glands immediately impelled physiologists to seek a similar apparatus in other glands lying deeper in the digestive canal.
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It is not accidental that all phenomena of human life are dominated by the search for daily bread - the oldest link connecting all living things, man included, with the surrounding nature.
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Physiology has, at last, gained control over the nerves which stimulate the gastric glands and the pancreas.
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Mankind will possess incalculable advantages and extraordinary control over human behavior when the scientific investigator will be able to subject his fellow men to the same external analysis he would employ for any natural object, and when the human mind will contemplate itself not from within but from without.
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