On the possibility of explaining away the difference as due to the peculiarities of nervous tissue I have spoken before, but this possibility must not be forgotten if we are tempted to draw unwarranted metaphysical deductions.
The law of habit, which is one of the most distinctive, may be fully explicable in terms of the peculiarities of nervous tissue, and these peculiarities, in turn, may be explicable by the laws of physics.
Two elements, nerve-fibers and ganglionic corpuscles, enter into the composition of nervous tissue.
The Nervous Tissue is of two kinds: The gray, which is pulpy and granulated, and the white fibrous tissue.
The brain is the great volume of nervous tissue that is lodged within the skull.
That this is possible is owing to the susceptibility of nervous tissue to take on habit, or to retain as permanent modifications, all impressions received.
The basis for the formation of physical habits appears also in this retentive power of nervous tissue.
This power possessed bynervous tissue to establish certain modes of action carries with it also an increase in the ease and accuracy with which the movements are performed.
Whether estimated by volume or by weight, the quantity of nervous tissue which is consumed in the electric organ of the skate is in excess of all the rest of the nervous system put together.
As it is a function of nervous tissue, how can it make itself manifest at a distance of 2000 miles--at the moment, too, when it is being annihilated.
These substances effect this result in all the tissues, and more especially may they be expected to accomplish it in nervous tissue, where their action is so conspicuously manifest.
The brain, which is the largest mass of nervous tissue in the body, weighs in the average sized man about 50 ounces, and in the average sized woman about 44 ounces.
When classified according to their essential structure, the tissues fall into four main groups: epithelial and glandular tissue, muscular tissue, nervous tissue, and connective tissue.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nervous tissue" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.