. Comparative anatomy. Anatomy, Comparative. THE SENSE ORGANS 581 nerve fibers with the brain. In some, the beaker-like eyes are connected with the epidermis; in others the eye sinks below the skin. Nereis has vesicular eyes. The differences between the various types of annelid eyes are so great that it is impossible to believe that they are genetically related to one another. The eyes of molluscs are sometimes beaker-eyes, sometimes vesicular eyes with a lens. On the edge of the mantle of pecten, are complex vesic- ular eyes, which have many features in common with those of vertebrates. Each


. Comparative anatomy. Anatomy, Comparative. THE SENSE ORGANS 581 nerve fibers with the brain. In some, the beaker-like eyes are connected with the epidermis; in others the eye sinks below the skin. Nereis has vesicular eyes. The differences between the various types of annelid eyes are so great that it is impossible to believe that they are genetically related to one another. The eyes of molluscs are sometimes beaker-eyes, sometimes vesicular eyes with a lens. On the edge of the mantle of pecten, are complex vesic- ular eyes, which have many features in common with those of vertebrates. Each eye is partly surrounded by a layer of opaque pigmented epithelium, which in front of the eye becomes a translucent cornea. Beneath the. CARTILASE HUSCUE Fig. 479.—A diagram of median sections of the eyes of vertebrates and cuttlefish. While the two types of eye resemble one another in many fundamental characters, the retina of the vertebrate eye is inverted, while that of the cuttlefish is not. Bergson has challenged the assumption of Darwinians that two eyes of such divergent origin could by chance variations alone come to resemble one another so closely. cornea and adherent to it, is a biconvex lens. Like the vertebrate eye, that of Pecten has a liquid-filled chamber. But the retina of Pecten, unlike that of vertebrates, has two layers of photoreceptors, each photo- receptor connected with a nerve fiber. Back of the retina lies an inner layer of pigment epithelium. There is no reason to doubt that such an eye is able to form an image. The eyes of cephalopods, especially those of sepia and loligo, bear a striking resemblance to those of vertebrates. But the fact that the retina is not inverted as in vertebrates, proves that the two cannot be genetically related. Bergson has cited this instance of similar results, notwith- standing diverse conditions, as proof of the existence of a vital factor or "elan vital" which distinguishes the living from the lifeless. Since


Size: 2453px × 1018px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookpublisherphi, booksubjectanatomycomparative