NO.14 Reading:The Relationship Between the Yi Yuan Ti and the Nervous System
The nature of the Yi Yuan Ti is determined by the functional characteristics of nerve cells.
As we know, nerve cells differ from ordinary biological cells. In the process of their own metabolism, they not only perform the absorption and excretion functions common to all biological cells but also enhance the ability to receive and transmit information carried by energy.
This gives nerve cells broader channels and content for interacting with the external world, and this function continues to improve as the nervous system evolves.
The entirety theory of Hunyuan proposes that any physical object is a tangible, condensed state of its own Hunyuan Qi, surrounded by a sparse, diffuse form of that same Qi. In light of this, when nerve cells become densely packed, the Hunyuan Qi around each cell permeates and merges with that of others, forming an interconnected whole. This whole is both influenced by changes in the nerve cells and can, in turn, exert an influence on them.
As animals evolved into humans, the nervous system became highly developed and finely divided in labor, further enhancing the ability of nerve cells to receive and transmit energy and information. The unified whole formed by the Hunyuan Qi around numerous nerve cells also strengthened significantly, and its functions underwent a profound transformation. It could not only reflect external events but also mirror various internal changes within itself—this is the result of the multi-layered self-reflection within the Yi Yuan Ti. Thus, it acquired relative independence. At this point, we no longer refer to it as the Hunyuan Qi of brain cells but instead call it the Yi Yuan Ti.
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Ling Ming
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NO.14 Reading:The Relationship Between the Yi Yuan Ti and the Nervous System
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