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26 December, 07:11

A popular, non-dualist approach to sensation was introduced by Mueller (1833) and it proposed that however and whenever a particular nerve cell is stimulated it produces the same sensation. This theory is:

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  1. 26 December, 07:14
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    This theory is true.

    Explanation:

    Whenever a nerve cell is stimulated, it emits a signal that will always cause the same sensation. Nerve cells are part of the nervous tissue of some organs and can be divided into two types: neurons and glial cells.

    What you need to know about these cells, to consider the theory shown above to be true, is that nerve cells obey the "all or nothing" law, that is, no matter the intensity of the stimulus, if they are stimulated, the as little as possible, will always cause the same sensation.
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