Neurology is the study of the nervous system. The nervous system is composed of two main sections. Those two sections are called the central nervous system, or the CNS, and the peripheral nervous system, or the PNS. These two subsystems are the two primary systems within the nervous system. The central nervous system, or, again, the CNS, is positioned within the upper half of the body, and it is the primary means by which the brain receives signals. The peripheral nervous system, or, again, the PNS, is positioned as an extension of the central axes of the nervous system. Much like the CNS, the PNS receives signals from the internal and external environments of the body, and conducts them appropriately, according to the signals which are received. Those signals can come from the central nervous system or peripheral nervous system, but regardless of the region of origin, the main functions of signal reception, interpretation, and subsequent reaction are all found within the whole of what has been described as the nervous system.
One of the main components of the nervous
system is a structure dubbed as the nerve cell, or neuron. This cell is what
composes a significant portion of the nervous system, and its purpose is one
fitting of the above, as it is designed to perform the role of electrochemical
signal reception, interpretation, and response.
To perform this job within the body, the
neuron is composed of smaller structures which serve unique purposes. The main
neuron cell body finds itself composed of a nucleus, an axon, and a dendrite.
The cell body serves as the main housing, or hub, of neuronal activity, and from
the cell body extends the aforementioned two structures dubbed as the axon and
dendrite. The axon sends messages out, and the dendrite brings messages in. This
relationship is compounded by the anatomy of each neuron structure, and as they
work in tandem with one another, they operate the nerve cell and serve as its
primary means of communication with external and internal signals.
Within the realm of applied philosophy,
the above described nerve anatomy articulates a common dynamic within nature
that finds an effective delineation through the use of a framework oriented
around balance and evenness. The body responds only to stimuli, elsewise there
would be nothing to engage, especially in an ocean of silence and calm.
In a continued description of this
understanding, the nervous system receives and gives responses to the whole of
the body’s inner and outer workings. Just as the dendrite receives and the axon
responds, so too is the way of all things that reside within existence. It can
easily be articulated as a supposed wisdom, in that what is given can only be
maintained if it serves a part in the larger much more inclusive dynamic of
perpetual flow and motion, as all things do and are. The yin yang elements
found present in what is described above are the epitome of balance and leveling
dynamics, as the nervous system of the body serves much in the way of
maintaining optimal conditions with said conditions being summated by the term
homeostasis. It is a term that defines the evenness which the body consistently
conducts and composes as a symphony of meticulous yin yang orchestration.
Balance is a vital capacity in understanding the knowledge and peace which reside within the realms of applied philosophy, and in knowing what is done innate by the body, there is a clear fundamental depiction of how the answers, and questions, wisdom provides serve as the basis of resolution for any and all impediments which in a very true sense would merely be works needing of proper stability and understanding.
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