Animation: The Nerve Impulse
How did you answer question number five LM, and did you get it right or wrong?
How did you answer question number five LM, and did you get it right or wrong?
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Animation: The Nerve Impulse
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Out of 5 questions, you answered 5 correctly, for a final grade of 100%.
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Any Birkeland current carries electrical information along it's length.
Animation: The Nerve Impulse
How did you answer question number five LM, and did you get it right or wrong?
Answer my question.
Michael,
If you insulate the axon of a nerve down its entire length there will be no nerve impulse. Do you know why?
Why should I bother? You have no integrity.
The fact you won't even answer my question is an example of pure denial on your part and pure evasion too.
Oh for crying out loud! You took away all the charged particle movement potential in that case and current won't flow in that instance because current won't traverse insulators!
You won't answer it because it refutes all of your claims.
Projection at its finest. I have been asking the same quesiton for pages, and you refuse to answer it. Answer mine and I will answer yours.
I am keeping the ends of the nerve uninsulated.
So why isn't there a current from one end of the nerve to the other?
So what? You also intentionally removed *part of the electrical circuit*!
If you'd actually watched that movie, they explain why. Na+ and K+ are *necessary* parts of the *circuit*.
What was your answer now on question five, and did you get it right?
My answer is false which is the correct answer.
I think that particular statement demonstrates the depth of your denial process about as clearly as any statement could demonstrate it. The correct answer according to the quiz was "True". Anyone is welcome to try it themselves:
kellus and I worked out our differences, so apparently you're the *only* person in the entire world who's "right".
http://www.christianforums.com/t7749242-79/#post63546685
McGraw-Hill is wrong, as both Kellhus and I have shown.
I agree with kellhus. You can call that a current all you like. So what is your point? That current, if you want to call it that, is not a nerve impulse.
My point is that you got the *incorrect* answer according to McGraw-Hill,
Kellhus and I have already agreed with McGraw-Hill, whereas you do not!
Do you even know how to give a "straight" or honest answer?
I don't think you read and understood the article.Yes. Did you? If you did, you wouldn't be asking the next question:
Yep.
Probably not since you've dissolved it actually.
Where did I do that?Compared to the three or four forms of metaphysical sky entities you're postulating, or something like string theory? Not at all!
I don't think you read and understood the article.
The sugar cube, allowing for random motions of the molecules, should reassemble itself, given enough time.
The article explains that what "saves us" from both your "space brain" and "reassembling sugar cubes" are that the time scales involved exceed the projected end of the cosmos.
Where did I do that?
It is interesting that someone can rationalize a sugar cube illustration about possibilities and require evidence of God.
Having an example of time scale but not going to the Creator of this Creation in their life time.
That is about how much value He is to some - instead they chose to be debators.
I don't think you read and understood the article.
The sugar cube, allowing for random motions of the molecules, should reassemble itself, given enough time.
Ah, there's our difference in a nutshell. I personally favor a static universe, or slowly (currently) expanding universe, but not a Big Bang theory. For all I know the universe is infinite and eternal.The article explains that what "saves us" from both your "space brain" and "reassembling sugar cubes" are that the time scales involved exceed the projected end of the cosmos.
You mean besides your claim about the 'end of the cosmos'?Where did I do that?