5 results for stemmed:synaps

NoPR Part Two: Chapter 14: Session 653, April 4, 1973 synapses neuronal nerve future events

Impulses possess a far different reality than physicists or biologists suppose. As you think now, “past” is still occurring. The “drag” still leaps the synapses, but, again, is not physically recorded. Past events continue. Consciously you only experience portions of events with your corporeal structure, yet the structure itself records them.

(11:20. Jane said that while in trance she hadn’t been aware that her delivery had been slow at times — yet she seemed to recall these fluctuations when I asked her about them. She thought Seth was “trying to couch the stuff in terms that would make sense to someone who didn’t know much about such things, while keeping it of interest to a physicist, say — which wasn’t easy to do. There was a lot more about synapses and neurons, and things like that, that he didn’t put in….”

(The junction between two nerve cells, or neurons, is called the synapse. [See the 637th session in Chapter Nine.] Jane is receiving more letters from scientists these days, many of whom ask intriguing questions about the type of material covered in this session. Resume in a faster manner at 11:45.)

UR1 Appendix 5: (For Session 686) appendix neurological leap messages vocabulary

[...] Because our mental habits automatically block out such material, we only recognize one series of neurological happenings — it takes time for the message to leap the nerve endings [the synapses]. [...]

NoPR Part One: Chapter 5: Session 626, November 8, 1972 involuntary brain Bach deride functions

[...] The junction between two neurons is called the synapse.

UR2 Section 4: Session 712 October 16, 1974 planet beam space clusters speeds

[...] He was beginning to recognize another synapse [neuronal] pattern not “native”; he was familiarizing himself with perceptions at a different set of coordinate points. [...]

UR2 Section 4: Session 708 September 30, 1974 sleepwalkers hibernation flesh code secondary

13. By “nerve ends” Seth means the synapses, which are the minute sites where neurons, or nerve cells, contact each other.