Summary: A stimulus contains, in addition to its obvious content, derived and integrated components.
(Not so much the stimulus contains them as that it will affect the nervous system
as if it did) This is the principle: the 'stimulus' contains everything the nervous system can transform it into. Futile, therefore, is it to worry much about the exact details of the presentation.
(Continued 2878)
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Summary: A process, in natural selection, that cannot reach a steady state but moves like the
Flying Dutchman.
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Stimulus nature of 2215 2896 6752
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Natural Selection [32]: Predators tend to diverge from the usual appearance. This process has no resting state
2862.
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