Abstract This article, the third in a series on the nervous system, continues the exploration of the central nervous system, examining the structure and
Human nervous system, system that conducts stimuli from sensory receptors to the brain and spinal cord and conducts impulses back to other body parts. As with other higher vertebrates, the human nervous system has two main parts: the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system.
so while scientific logic is a very good map for understanding a certain aspect of the truth, it s only a map and it understands only a little bit of that aspect of the truth. because, face it, everything we know about the human, about the universe, is how the universe interacts with the human nervous system and the questions we ask of nature. and unless you say, this is a human universe, it s not as it is, it s as how humans experience it. and unless you answer, what does it mean to be human, it means to think rationally, to feel, to intuit, to imagine, to create, and see from a cosmic perspective, from a perspective of unity consciousness. to a physicist, i want to know where did the universe come from and where is it going? what is life all about? and how does genetics work. how does the brain produce the mind, okay? and as a person, i want to know
what do we find when we get in the middle of the debate? i think we disagree more than ever before. you know, i believe that life has a divine source, that life comes from life. i believe that consciousness is primary, that we don t see nature as it is. we see nature and the cosmos as exposed to the human nervous system and the questions we ask, not as it is. because the only universe we know is the human earth, universe. if there is a universe outside of the human consciousness it is irrelevant. well, i believe in looking at the only universe that we know or can know and that s the universe that we do experience and so i think the real question is knowledge and how we attain it. and thousands of years ago people made up all sorts of stories to explain the eclipses, the tides and earthquakes, and