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The machinery of the mind

Chapter 5: CHAPTER II THE EVOLUTION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
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About This Book

This book presents a concise, popular exposition of psychological principles, beginning with the nervous system as the physical basis of consciousness and proceeding to describe levels of the mind, the formation of ideas, instincts, complexes, and mechanisms such as repression, dissociation, and symbolization. It examines dreams, phantasies, and psychopathology, outlines therapeutic techniques including psychoanalysis, hypnosis, and suggestion, and discusses practical applications to education, industry, and personal development. Written for non-specialists, it employs vivid metaphors and diagrammatic explanations to make concepts accessible and emphasizes how basic psychological knowledge can assist in understanding, treating, and improving everyday mental life.

CHAPTER II
THE EVOLUTION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

The easiest way to grasp the organisation of our complex nervous structure is to study its evolution from its humble beginnings in the simplest forms of life.

In single-celled animalculæ, the most primitive type of living creatures, a single cell performs all the functions of life; it moves, breathes, assimilates, excretes, and feels. With the development of multi-cellular organisms, however, different cells are given different work to do, and made to do that, and nothing else.

It then becomes necessary that co-ordination should be maintained between the sense organs that perceive the prey and the muscles that move to its capture, and for this purpose other cells are told off to specialise in communication.

Thus it will be seen that the functional unit of the nervous system is not the nerve cell, but what is called the SENSORI-MOTOR ARC, consisting of a nerve carrying the incoming sensation from a sense organ and making contact with another nerve which carries the outgoing impulse to a muscle or organ.

When a multiplicity of muscles becomes available for movement, it is necessary to further link up the sensori-motor arcs, so that other parts of the structure may be brought into play, and the response not be confined to one muscle alone; so nerve cells form loops upon the arcs, and loops upon the loops, with further intercommunications among themselves, the organisation becoming more and more elaborate, admitting of more and more complex reactions to stimulus, till finally the wonderful complications of the human brain are achieved.