Mimicry, its effects on emotion, II.463-6Mind, depends on brain-conditions, I. 4, 553;the mark of its presence, 8;difficulty of stating its connection with brain, 176;what psychology means by it, 183, 216Mind-Stuff theory, Chapter VI:a postulate of evolution, I. 146, 176;some proofs of it, 148;author's interpretation of them, 154;feelings cannot mix, 157 ff., II.2,103Miser, associationist explanation of the, II.423ff.Mitchell, J. K.,II.616Mitchell, S. W.,I. 381; II.38-9,380Modesty, II.435Moll, A.,II.616Molyneux,II.210Monadism, I. 179Monism, I. 366-7Monkey's cortical centres, I. 34-5, 46, 59Montgomery, E.,I. 158Moral principles, II.639,672Morris, G. S.,I. 365Mosso,on blood-supply to brain, I. 97-9plethysmographic researches, II.378;on fear,419,483Motor centres, I. 31 ff.'Motor circle,' II.583Motor strands, I. 38;for special muscles, I. 64Motor type of imagination, II.61Movement, perception of, by sensory surfaces, II.171ff.;part played by, in vision,197,203,234-7the, Production of,Chap. XXIIrequires guiding sensations,490illusory perception of, during anæsthesia,489;results from every kind of consciousness,526Mozart,I. 255Müller, G. E.,I. 445, 456-8; II.198,280,491,502,508,517Müller, J.,I. 68; II.640Müller, J. J.,II.213Müller, Max,I. 269Munk, H.,I. 41-3-4-5-6, 57-8-9, 63Münsterberg,on Meynert's scheme, I. 77;on reaction times with intellectual operation, 432:on association, 562;on time-perception, 620, 637;on imagination, II.74;on muscular sensibility,189;on volition,505;on feeling of innervation,514;on association,590Muscles, how represented in nerve-centres, I. 19Muscle-reading, II.525Muscular sense, its cortical centre, I. 61;its existence, II.189ff.,197ff.;its insignificance in space-perception,197-203,234-7Music, its accidental genesis, II.627;687Mussey,II.543Mutilations, inherited, II.627Myers, F. W. H.,I. 400; II.133Mysophobia, II.435,545Nature, the order of, its incongruence with that of our thought, II.634ff.Naunyn,I. 55Necessary truths are all truths of comparison, II.641ff.,651,662.Seeexperience,a priori connections,etc.Neiglick,I. 543Neural process, in perception. I. 78 ff.;in habit, 105 ff.;in association, 566;in memory, 655;in imagination, II.68ff.;in perception,82ff.,103ff.;in hallucination,122ff.;in space-perception,143;in emotion,474;in volition,580ff.;in association,587ff.Nitrous oxide intoxication, II.284Nonsense, how it escapes detection, I. 261Normal position in vision, II.238Nothnagel,I. 51, 60-1Number, II.653Obersteiner,I. 87, 445Object, use of the word, I. 275, 471;confusion of, with thought that knows it, 278Objective world, known before self, I. 273;its primitive unity, 487-8;ditto, II.8Objectsversusideas, I. 230, 278Old-fogyism, II.110Orchansky,I. 95'Overtone' (psychic), I. 258, 281-2Pain, I. 143,its relations to the will, II.549ff.,583-4Paneth,I. 64, 65Parallelism, theory of, between mental and cerebral phenomena, seeAutomaton-theoryParesis of external rectus muscle, II.236,507Parinaud,II.71Partiality of mind, seeinterest,teleology,intelligence,selection,essencesPast time, known in a present feeling, I. 627;the immediate past is a portion of the present duration-block, 608 ff.Patellar reflex, II.380Paths through cortex, I. 71;their formation, 107-12; II.584ff.;association depends on them,567ff.;memory depends on them,655ff.,661,686Paulhan, F.,I. 250, 408, 670; II.64,476Pedagogic remarks: I. 121-7; II.110,401-2,409,463,466Perception.Chapter XIX:compared with sensation, II.1,76;involves reproductive processes,78;is ofprobableobjects,82ff.;not an unconscious inference,111ff.;rapidity of,131Perception-time, II.131Perez, B.,I. 446; II.416Personal equation, I. 413Personality, alterations of, I. 373 ff.Pflüger,on frog's spinal cord, I. 9, 134Philosophies, their test, II.312Phosphorus and thought, I. 101Phrenology, I. 27Pick, E.,I. 669Pitres,I. 206Planchette-writing, I. 208-9, 393 ff.Plasticity, as basis of habit, defined, I. 105Platner,II.208Plato,I. 462Play, II.427Pleasure, as related to will, I. 143; II.549,583-4Points, identical, theory of, II.222ff.Possession, Spirit-, I. 393 ff.Post-hypnotic suggestion, II.613Practical interests, their effects on discrimination, I. 515 ff.Prayer, I. 316'Preperception,' I. 439Present, the present moment, I. 606 ff.Preyer,II.403Probability determines what object shall be perceived, II.82,104,258,260-3Problematic conceptions, I. 463Problems, the process of solution of, I. 584Projection of sensations, eccentric, II.31ff.Projection, theory of, II.228Psychologist's fallacy, the, seeFallacyPsychophysic law, I. 539Pugnacity, II.409Pure Ego, I. 342Putnam, J. J.,I. 61Questioning mania, II.284Rabier,I. 470, 604Rational propositions, II.644Rationality is based on apprehension of series, II.659Rationality, postulates of, II.670,677Rationality, sense of, I. 260-4; II.647Reaction-time, I. 87;simple, 88;what it measures is not conscious thought, 90;Lange's distinction between muscular and sensorial, 92;its variations, 94-7;influenced by expectant attention, 427 ff.;after intellectual process, 432;after discrimination, 523;after association, 557;after perception, II.131Real size and shape of visual objects, II.179,237ff.Reality, the Perception of,Chapter XXI;not a distinct content of consciousness, II.286;various orders of,287ff.;every object hassomekind of reality,291ff.;the choice of,290;practical,293ff.;means relation to the self,295-8;relation of sensations to,299;of emotions,306Reason, I. 551. SeeLogicReasoning,Chapter XXII;its definition, II.325;involves the picking out of essences, or sagacity,329;and abstraction,332;its utility depends on the peculiar constitution of this world,337ff.,651;depends on association by similarity,345Recall, I. 578, 654'Recepts,' II.327,349,351Recognition, I. 673Recollection, voluntary, I. 585 ff.Redintegration, I. 569'Reductives,' II.125,291Reflex acts, I. 12;reaction-time measures one, 90;concatenated habits are constituted by a chain of, 116Reid, Thomas,I. 609, 78; II.214,216,218,240,309Relating principle, I. 687-8Relation, feelings of, I. 243 ff.;space-relations, II.148ff.Relations, inward, between ideas, II.639,642,661,671;the principle of transferred,646Relief, II.254-7. Seethird dimensionRenouvier, Ch.,I. 551; II.309Reproduction in memory, I. 574 ff., 654;voluntary, 585 ff.Resemblance, I. 528Respiration, effects of sensory stimuli upon, II.376Restitution of function, I. 67 ff.Restoration of function, I. 67 ff.Retention in memory, I. 653 ff.Retentiveness, organic, I. 659 ff.;it is unchangeable, 663 ff.Retinal image, II.92Retinal sensibility, seevision,space,identical points,third dimension,projection,etc.Revival in memory, I. 574 ff., 654Reynolds, Mary,I. 381Ribot, Th.,I. 375;on attention, 444, 446, 680, 682Richet, Ch.,I. 638, 644-6-7Riehl, A.,II.32Robertson, G. C.,I. 461; II.86Romanes, G. J.,II.95,132,327-9,349,351,355,397Romantic and classic, II.469Rosenthal,I. 79Ross, J.,I. 56-7Royce, J.,I. 374; II.316-7Royer-Collard,I. 609Rutherford,II.170Sagacity, II.331,343Sameness, I. 272, 459, 480; II.650Schaefer, W.,I. 35, 53, 59, 63Schiff, M.,I. 58, 78, 100Schmid,I. 683Schmidt, H. D.,II.399-400Schneider, G. H.,on Habits, I. 112, 118-20;on perception of motion, II.173;on evolution of movements,380;on instincts,387-8,411,418,439Schopenhauer,II.33,273Schrader,I. 72 ff.Science, the genesis of, II.665-9Sea-sickness, susceptibility to, an accident, II.627Seat of consciousness, I. 65;of Soul, 214;of sensations, no original, II.34Sciences, the natural, the factors of their production, II.633ff.;a Turkish cadi upon,640;postulate things with unchangeable properties,656Sciences, the pure, they express results of comparison exclusively, II.641;classifications,646;logic,647;mathematics,653Secretiveness, II.432Seguin,I. 48, 75Selection, a cardinal function of consciousness, 284 ff., 402, 594; II.584;of visual reality, II.177ff.,237;of reality in general,290,294;of essential quality,333,370,634Self, consciousness of, Chap. X:not primary, I. 273;the empirical self, I. 291;its constituents, 292;the material self, 292;the social self, 293;the spiritual self, 296;resolvable into feelings localized in head, 300 ff.;consciousness of personal identity, 330 ff.;its alterations, 373 ff.Self-feeling, I. 305 ff.Self-love, I. 317;the name for active impulses and emotions towards certainobjects; we do not love our bare principle of individuality, 323Self-seeking, I. 307 ff.Selves, their rivalry, I. 309 ff.Semi-reflex acts, I. 13Sensation, does attention increase its strength? I. 425;terminus of thought, 471Sensation,Chapter XVII;distinguished from perception, II.1,76;its cognitive function,3;pure sensation an abstraction,3;the terminus of thought,7Sensations, are not compounds, I. 158 ff.; II.2;their supposed combination by a higher principle, I. 687; II.27-30;their influence on each other, II.28-30;their eccentric projection,31ff.,195ff.;their localization inside of one another,183ff.;their relation to reality,299ff.;to emotions,453;their fusion, seeMind-stuff theorySensationalism, I.243;criticised by spiritualism,687Sensationalism, II.5;in the field of space-perception, criticised,216ff.;its difficulties,231-7;defended,237ff.,517Sergi,II.34Serial increase, I. 490; II.644Series, II.644-51,659ff.Seth, A.,II.4Sexual function, I. 22Shadows, colored, II.25Shame, II.435Shoemaker,Dr., I. 273Shyness, II.430Sight, its cortical centre, I. 41 ff., 66Sign-making, a differentia of man, II.356Signs, local, II.155ff.Sigwart, C.,II.634-6Sikorsky,II.465Similarity, I. 528Similarity, association by, I. 578; II.345,353Skin, discrimination of points on, I. 512Sleep, partial consciousness during, I. 213Sociability, II.430Somnambulism, seehypnotism,hystericsSoul, theory of the, I. 180;inaccessibility of, 187;its essence is to think (according to Descartes), 200;seat of, 214;arguments for its existence, 343 ff.;an unnecessary hypothesis for psychology, 350;compared with transcendental Ego, 365;a relating principle, 499Space, the perception of,Chapter XX;primitive extensity in three dimensions, II.134-9;spatial order,145;space-relations,148;localization in,153ff.;how real space is mentally constructed,166ff.;part played by movement in,171-6;measurement of extensions,177ff.;synthesis of originally chaotic sensations of extension,181ff.;part played by articular surfaces in,189ff.;by muscles,197ff.;how the blind perceive space,203ff.;visual space,211-268;theory of identical points,222;of projection,228;difficulties of sensation-theory expounded and replied to,231-268;historical sketch of opinion,270ff.Spalding, D. A.,II.396,398,400,406Span of consciousness, I. 405, 640Speech, the 'centre' of, I. 55;its misleading influence in psychology, I. 194;thought possible without it, 269.SeeAphasia,PhrenologySpencer,his formula of 'adjustment,' I. 6;on formation of paths in nerve-centres, 109;on chasm between mind and matter, 147;on origin of consciousness, 148;on 'integration' of nervous shocks, 151-3;on feelings of relation, 247;on unity of self, 354;on conceivability, 464;on abstraction, 506;on association, 600;on time perception, 622, 639;on memory, 649;on recognition, 673;on feeling and perception, II.113,180;on space-perception,272,282;on genesis of emotions,478ff.;on free-will,576;on inheritance of acquired peculiarities,620ff.,679;on 'equilibration,'627;on genesis of cognition,643;on that of sociality and pity,685Spinoza,II.288Spir, A.,II.665,677'Spirit-control,' I. 228Spiritualist theory of the self, I. 342; II.5Spiritualists, I. 161Stanley, Henry M.,II.310Starr, A.,I. 54, 56Statistical method in psychology, I. 194Steiner,I. 72-3Steinthal,I. 604; II.107-9Stepanoff,II.170Stereoscope, II.87Stereoscopy, II.223,252. Seethird dimensionSternberg,II.105,515Stevens,I. 617Stevens, E. W.,I. 397Story, Jean,I. 263Stream of Thought, Chapter IX:schematic representations of, I. 279-82Stricker, S.,II.62ff.Strümpell, A.,I. 376, 445, 489, 491Strümpell,Prof., II.353Stuart, D.,I. 406, 427Stumpf. C,on attention, I. 426;on difference, 493;on fusion of impressions, 522, 530-3;on strong and weak sensations, 547;on relativity of knowledge, II.11;on sensations of extent,219,221Subjective sensations, I. 516 ff.Substance, spiritual, I. 345Substantive states of mind, I. 243Substitution of parts for wholes in reasoning, II.330;of the same for the same,650Subsumption, the principle of mediate, II.648Succession, not known by successive feelings, I. 628;vs.duration, 609Suggestion, in hypnotism, II.598-601;post-hypnotic,613Suicide, I. 317Sully, J.,I. 191; II.79,221,272,281,322,425Summation of stimuli, I. 82;of elements of feeling, 151;