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prevents their reuniting. Impediment of speech._ 11. _Trains more easily dissevered than circles._ 12. _Sleep destroys volition and external stimulus._ II. _Instances of various catenations in a young lady playing on the harpsichord._ III. 1. _What catenations are the strongest._ 2. _Irritations joined with associations from strongest connexions. Vital motions._ 3. _New links with increased force, cold fits of fever produced._ 4. _New links with decreased force. Cold bath._ 5. _Irritation joined with sensation. Inflammatory fever. Why children cannot tickle themselves. 6. Volition joined with sensation. Irritative ideas of sound become sensible._ 7. _Ideas of imagination, dissevered by irritations, by volition, production of surprise._ I. 1. To investigate with precision the catenations of animal motions, it would be well to attend to the manner of their production; but we cannot begin this disquisition early enough for this purpose, as the catenations of motion seem to begin with life, and are only extinguishable with it; We have spoken of the power of irritation, of sensation, of volition, and of association, as preceding the fibrous motions; we now step forwards, and consider, that conversely they are in their turn preceded by those motions; and that all the successive trains or circles of our actions are composed of this twofold concatenation. Those we shall call trains of action, which continue to proceed without any stated repetitions; and those circles of action, when the parts of them return at certain periods, though the trains, of which they consist, are not exactly similar. The reading an epic poem is a train of actions; the reading a song with a chorus at equal distances in the measure constitutes so many circles of action. 2. Some catenations of animal motion are produced by reiterated successive irritations, as when we learn to repeat the alphabet in its order by frequently reading the letters of it. Thus the vermicular motions of the bowels were originally produced by the successive irritations of the passing aliment; and the succession of actions of the auricles and ventricles of the heart was originally formed by successive stimulus of the blood, these afterwards become part of the diurnal circles of animal actions, as appears by the periodical returns of hunger, and the quickened pulse of weak people in the evening. Other catenations of animal motion are
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