Page:Life in Motion.djvu/217

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VOLUNTARY MOVEMENTS
197

organ of sense, it may be from the skin, or from the eyes, or from the muscles themselves, but they must be sent to the brain before the brain will send out messages along motor nerves to groups of muscles which are called into action, so as to perform a definite movement. If, from a disorder of the nerves, or of the nerve strands in the spinal cord that carry messages up to the brain, these messages cannot reach the brain, movements will either not be made at all, or if they are made, they are irregular, spasmodic, wanting in adjustment for a definite, purposive-like action. Thus sensory impressions come before and determine even so-called voluntary movements.

If this be the case, you will naturally inquire as to the mechanism by which certain messages sent to the brain are so arranged or transmitted as to call forth and transmit nerve-currents along certain specific nerve-fibres to certain specific muscles. We now get into a misty region in which we have only to grope our way. Analogies may help us a little. Is there something that answers the purpose of a telephonic exchange, in which a presiding genius, by putting in and taking