Chapter 32

Abbott, T. K., II.221Abstract ideas, I. 468, 508; II.48Abstract qualities, II.329-37,340Abstraction, I. 505; II.346ff. SeedistractionAccommodation, feeling of, II.93,235Acquaintance, I. 220Acquired characters, seeinheritanceAcquisitiveness, II.422,679Actors, their emotions whilst playing, II.464Adaptation of mind to environment results in our knowing the impressing circumstances, II.625ff.Æsthetic principles, II.639,672After-images, I. 645-7; II.67,200,604Agoraphobia, II.421Agraphia, I. 40, 62Alfieri, II.543Allen, G.,I. 144; II.631Alteration of one impression by another one simultaneously taking place, II.28ff.,201Alternating personality, I. 379 ff.Ambiguity of optical sensations, II.231-7Amidon, I. 100Amnesia in hysterical disease, I. 384 ff.;accompanies anæsthesia, 386, 682;in hypnotic trance, II.602.SeeforgettingAmputated limbs, feeling of, II.38-9,105Anæsthesia, in hysterics, I. 203 ff.;involves correlated amnesia, 386;movements executed during, II.105,489-92,520-1;and emotion,455-6;in hypnotism,606-9Analogies, the perception of, I. 530Analysis, I. 502; II.344Anger, II.409,460,478Aphasia, motor, I. 37, 62;sensory, I. 53-4-5;optical, I. 60;amnesia in, 640, 684; II.58Apperception, II.107ff.Apperception, transcendental Unity of, I. 362Appropriateness, characterizes mental acts, I. 13Apraxia, I. 52A prioriconnections exist only between objects of perception and movements, not between sensory ideas, II.581.A prioriideas and experience,Chapter XXVIII.A prioripropositions, II.661-5Archer, W., II.464Arithmetic, II.654.Articular sensibility, II.189ff.Association, Chapter XIV:is not of ideas, but of things thought of, I. 554;examples of, 555 ff.;its rapidity, 557 ff.;by contiguity, 561;elementary law of, 566;'mixed' association, 571;conditions of, 575 ff.;by similarity, 578;three kinds of association compared, 580;in voluntary thought, 583;by contrast, 593;history of the doctrine of, 594;association the means of localization, II.158ff.;connection of association by similarity with reasoning,345ff.Associationism, I. 161Associationist theory of the self, I. 342, 350 ff.;of space-perception, II.271ff.Asymbolia, I. 52Attention, Chapter XI: to how many things possible, I. 405 ff.;to simultaneous sight and sound, 411 ff.;its varieties, 416;passive, 417;voluntary, 42 ff.;its effects, 424 ff.;its influence on reaction-time, 427-34;accompanied by feelings of tension due to adaptation of sense-organs, 434-8;involves imagination or preperception of object, 438-44;conceivable as a mere effect, 448 ff.Aubert, H.,II.235Auditory centre in brain, I. 52-6Auditory type of imagination, II.60'Ausfallserscheinungen,'I. 75Automatic writing, I. 393 ff.Austen, Jane,I. 571Automaton-Theory, Chapter V:postulated rather than proved, I. 134-8;reasons against it, 138-144;applied to attention, 448disregarded in this book, II.583Azam,Dr., I. 380.Babe and candle, scheme of, I. 25Baby's first perception, II.8,84;his early instinctive movements,404ff.Baer, von,I. 639Bagehot, W.,I. 582; II.283,308Bain,on series conscious of itself, I. 162;on self-esteem, 313;on self-love, 328, 354;on attention, 444;on association, 485, 530, 561, 589, 601, 653; II.6,12,69,186,271,282,296,319,322,372-3,463,466,551,554-5Ballard,I. 266Balzac,I. 374Bartels,I. 432Bastian, H. C.,II.488Baumann,II.409Baxt,I. 648Beaunis, E.,II.492Bechterew,I. 407Belief,Chapter XXI:in sensations, II.299ff.;in objects of emotion,306ff.;in theories,311ff.;and will,319.SeerealityBell, C.,II.483,492Bergson, J.,II.609Berkeley,I. 254, 469, 476; II.43,49,77,212,240,666Bernhardt,II.502Bernheim,I. 206Bertrand, A.,II.518Bessel,I. 413Binet, A.,I. 203 ff.; II.71,74,128ff.,130,167,491,520Black, R. W.,II.339Bleek,II.358Blind, the, their space-perception, II.202ff.;after restoration to sight,211-2;hallucination of a blind man,323;dreams of the,44Blindness, mental, I. 41, 50, 66. SeeSight,Hemianopsia,etc.Blix,II.170Bloch,II.515Blood, its exciting effect on the nerves, II.412-3Blood, B. P.,II.284Blood-supply to brain, I. 97Bourne, A.,I. 391Bourru,Dr., I. 388Bowditch, H. P.,his reaction-timer, I. 87;on contrast in seen motion, II.247;on knee-jerk,380;comparison of touch and sight,520Bowen, F.,I. 214Bowne, B. P.,on knowledge, I. 219Bradley, F. H.,I. 452, 474, 604; II.7,9,284,648Brain, its functions, Chapter II:of frog, I. 14;of dog, 33;of monkey, 34;of man, 36;lower centres compared with hemispheres, 9-10, 75;circulation in, 97;instability, 139;its connection with Mind, 176;'entire' brain not a real physical fact, 176;its changes as subtle as those of thought, 234;its dying vibrations operative in producing consciousness, 242Influence of environment upon it, 626 ff.Brain-process, seeneural processBrain-structure, the two modes of its genesis, II.624Brentano,I. 187, 547Bridgeman, Laura,II.62,358,420Broca's convolution, I. 39, 54Brodhun,I. 542Brown, Thos.,I. 248, 277, 371; II.271Brown-Séquard,I. 43, 67, 69; II.695Brutes, the intellect of, II.348ff.Bucke, R. M.,II.460Bubnoff,I. 82Burke,II.464Burnham, W. H.,I. 689Burot,Dr., I. 388Caird, E.,I. 366, 469, 471; II.11Calmeil, A.,II.524Campanella,II.464Campbell, G.,I. 261Cardaillac,I. 247Carlyle, T.,I. 311Carpenter, W. B.,on formation of habits, I. 110;ethical remarks on habit, 120;mistakes in speech, 257;lapses of memory, 374;on not feeling pain, 419;on ideo-motor action, II.522Carville,I. 69Catalepsy, I. 229; II.583Cattell,on reaction-time, I. 92, 432; 524;on recognition, 407, 648;on attention, 420;on association-time, 558 ff.Cause, consciousness a, I. 187; II.583,592Centres, cortical, I. 30 ff.;motor, 31;visual, 41;auditory, 52;olfactory, 57;gustatory, 58;tactile, 58Cerebral process, seeneural processCerebrum, seeBrain,HemispheresChadbourne, P A.,II.383Characters, general, II.329ff.Charcot,I. 54-5; II.58,596Chloroform, I. 531Choice, seeselection,interestCirculation in brain, I. 97;effects of sensory stimuli upon, II.374ff.;in grief,443-4Classic and romantic, II.469Classifications, II.646Clay, E. C. R.,I. 609Cleanliness, II.434Clearness, I. 426Clifford,I. 130-2Clouston,II.114,284-5,537,539Cobbe, F. P.,I. 374Cochlea, theory of its action, II.169Cognition, seeknowingCohen, H.,I. 365Coleridge, S. T.,I. 572, 681Collateral innervation, seevicarious functionComparison, Chapter XIII:relations discovered by comparison have nothing to do with the time and space order of their terms, II.641;mediate,489,644;seedifference,likenessComposition, of Mind out of its elements, seeMind-Stuff theory;differences due to, I. 491Comte, A.,I. 187Conceivability, I. 463Conceptions, Chapter XII:defined, I. 461;their permanence, 464 ff.;do not develop of themselves, 466 ff.;abstract, 468;universal, 478;essentially teleological, II.332Conceptual order different from perceptual, I. 482Concomitants, law of varying, I. 506Confusion, II.352Consciousness, its seat, I. 65;its distribution, 142-3;its function of selection, 139-41;ispersonalin form, 225;is continuous, 237, 488;of lack, 251;of self not essential, 273;ofobjectcomes first, 274;always partial and selective, 284 ff., seeSelection;of the process of thinking, 300 ff.;the span of, 405Consent, in willing, II.568Considerations, I. 20Constructiveness, II.426Contiguity, association by, I. 561Continuity of object of consciousness, I. 488Contrast, of colors, II.13-27;of temperatures,14;two theories of,17ff.,245;of movements,245ff.,250Convolutions, motor, I. 41Cortex, of brain, experiments on, I. 31 ff.Cramming, I. 663Credulity, our primitive, II.319Cudworth, R.,II.9'Cue,' the mental, II.497,518Cumberland, S.,II.525Curiosity, II.429Czermak,II.170,175Darwin, C.,II.432,446,479,484,678,681-2-4Darwinism, scholastic reputation of, II.670Data, the, of psychology, I. 184Davidson, T.,I. 474Deaf-mute's thought in infancy, I. 266Deafness, mental, I. 50, 55-6. SeehearingDean, S.,I. 394Decision, five types of, II.531Degenerations, descending in nerve-centres, I. 37, 52Delabarre, E.,II.13-27,71Delbœuf, J.,I. 455, 531, 541, 542, 548-9; II.100,189,249,264,605,609,612Deliberation, II.528ff.Delusions, insane, I. 375; II.114ff.Depth, seethird dimensionDescartes,I. 180, 200, 214, 344Destutt de Tracy,I. 247Determinism must be postulated by psychology, II.576Dewey, J.,I. 473Dichotomy in thinking, II.654Dickens, C.,I. 374Dietze,I. 407, 617Difference, not resolvable into composition, I. 490;noticed most between species of a genus, 529;the magnitude of, 531;least discernible, 537 ff.;methods for ascertaining, 540 ff.Difference, local, II.167ff.;genesis of our perception of,642Diffusion of movements, the law of, II.372Dimension, third, II.134ff.,212ff.,220Dipsomania, II.543Disbelief, II.284Discrimination, Chapter XIII:conditions which favor it, I. 494;improves by practice, 508;spatial, II.167ff.SeedifferenceDissociation, I. 486-7;law of, by varying concomitants, 506Dissociation, ditto, II.345,359Dissociation, of one part of the mind from another, seeJanet, PierreDistance, between terms of a series, I. 530Distance, in space, seethird dimensionDistraction, I. 401. SeeinattentionDizziness, seevertigoDog's cortical centres, after Ferrier, I. 33;after Munk, I. 44-5;after Luciani, I. 46, 53, 58, 60;for special muscles, 64;hemispheres ablated, 70Donaldson,II.170Donders,II.235Double images, II.225-30,252Doubt, II.284,318ff.;the mania of,545Dougal, J. D.,II.222Drainage of one brain-cell by another, II.583ff.Dreams, II.294Drobisch,I. 632, 660Drunkard, II.565Drunkenness, I. 144; II.543,565,628Dualism of object and knower, I. 218, 220Duality, of Brain, I. 390, 399Dudley, A. T.,on mental qualities of an athlete, II.539Dufour,II.211Dunan, Ch.,II.176,206,208-9Duration, the primitive object in time-perception, I. 609;our estimate of short, 611 ff.'Dynamogeny,' II.379ff.,491Ebbinghaus, H.,I. 548, 676Eccentric projection of sensations, II.31ff.,195ff.Education of hemispheres, I. 76Seepedagogic remarksEffort, II.534-7;Muscular effort,562;Moral effort,549,561,578-9Egger, V.,I. 280-1-2; II.256Ego, Empirical, I. 291 ff.;pure, 342 ff.;'transcendental,' 362;criticised, 364Elementary factors of mind, seeUnits of consciousnessElsas,I. 548Emerson, R. W.,I. 582, II.307Emotion,Chapter XXV:continuous with instinct, II.442;description of typical emotions,443-9;results from reflex effects of stimulus upon organism,449ff.;their classification,454;in anæsthetic subjects,455;in the absence of normal stimulus,458-60;effects of expressing,463ff.;of repressing,466;the subtler,469ff.;the neural process in,472;differences in individuals,474;evolution of special emotions,477ff.Empirical ego, I. 290Empirical propositions, II.644Emulation, II.409Ennui, I. 626Entoptic sensations, I. 515 ff.Equation, personal, I. 413'Equilibration,' direct and indirect, II.627Essences, their meaning, II.329ff.;sentimental and mechanical,665Essential qualities, seeessencesEstel,I. 613, 618Evolutionism demands a 'mind-dust,' 146Exner,on human cortical centres, I. 36;on 'circumvallation' of centres, 65;his psychodometer, 87;on reaction-time, 91;on perception of rapid succession, 409;on attention, 439;on time-perception, 615, 638, 646;on feeling of motion, II.172Experience, I. 402, 487;Relation of experience to necessary judgments,Chapter XXVIII;Experience defined, II.619ff.,628Experimentation in psychology, I. 192Extradition of sensations, II.31ff.,195ff.Fallacy, the Psychologist's, I. 196, 278, 153; II.281Familiarity, sense of, seerecognitionFatalism, II.574Fatigue, diminishes span of consciousness, I. 640Fear, instinct of, II.396,415;the symptoms of,446;morbid,460;origin of,478Fechner,I. 435-6, 533, 539 ff., 549, 616, 645; II.50,70,137ff.,178,464Feeling, synonym for consciousness in general in this book, I. 186;feelings of relation, 243Félida X.,I. 380-4Féré, Ch.,II.68,378ff.Ferrier, D.,I. 31, 46-7-8, 53, 57-8-9, 445; II.503Ferrier, Jas.,I. 274, 475Fiat, of the will, II.501,526,561,564;568.SeedecisionFichte,I. 365Fick,I. 150Fiske, J.,II.577Fixed ideas. Seeinsistent ideas


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