On IntelligenceA&C Black, 1. jan. 1998 - 588 sider Writing from a rigorously deterministic and positivistic stance and drawing on evidence from psychopathology and neural physiology, Taine mounted an influential attack on the tendency toward reification inherent in faculty psychology. For Taine, terms such as 'self', 'memory', and 'season' stood not for entities but simply for successions of mental events. |
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Side xvii
... connected with the organic state - Possibility of two organic states severed from one another , and recurring periodically in the same individual - Case of an American lady - Two lives and two mental states may thus be met with in the ...
... connected with the organic state - Possibility of two organic states severed from one another , and recurring periodically in the same individual - Case of an American lady - Two lives and two mental states may thus be met with in the ...
Side xxiii
... connected with the first - This connexion seems inexplicable- Advantage of the preceding reductions and of the theory of ele- mentary sensations PAGE . 187 II . Situation of the difficulty - Notion of molecular movement in the cells and ...
... connected with the first - This connexion seems inexplicable- Advantage of the preceding reductions and of the theory of ele- mentary sensations PAGE . 187 II . Situation of the difficulty - Notion of molecular movement in the cells and ...
Side xxvii
... connected recol- lections , and ordinary previsions .. .255 VIII . Psychological illusion as to consciousness - We are inclined to take the knowledge of our present state for a simple and spiritual act of mind - The representation ...
... connected recol- lections , and ordinary previsions .. .255 VIII . Psychological illusion as to consciousness - We are inclined to take the knowledge of our present state for a simple and spiritual act of mind - The representation ...
Side xxxi
... connected with a certain organized body - What we mean by this connexion - More precise ideas of which the Idea of the Ego is composed - Idea of a group of capacities or faculties . 356 . . 357 III . What we understand by the words ...
... connected with a certain organized body - What we mean by this connexion - More precise ideas of which the Idea of the Ego is composed - Idea of a group of capacities or faculties . 356 . . 357 III . What we understand by the words ...
Side xxxiii
... connected view - In all the preceding opera- tions , an image or group of images is consolidated with a sensation or a group of sensations , with an image or a group of images , by virtue of the laws of the revival and association of ...
... connected view - In all the preceding opera- tions , an image or group of images is consolidated with a sensation or a group of sensations , with an image or a group of images , by virtue of the laws of the revival and association of ...
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If every Fact or Law has its Explanatory Reason | 3 |
CHAPTER II | 7 |
A general Idea is nothing but a name provided with two characters | 13 |
CHAPTER III | 23 |
Examples in GeometryOur Idea of a Circle is not the sensible | 31 |
BOOK II | 35 |
General views as to the thinking beingThe mind is a collection | 70 |
7 | 77 |
and retinal sensations of the eye is the substitute of a very long series | 336 |
How far this hallucination is true in the normal stateOur illusion | 350 |
BOOK III | 356 |
Our past as well as our present events appear internalThe series | 363 |
mindsAnalogy of other living bodies and our ownThis analogy | 383 |
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GENERAL THINGS | 391 |
To these general extracts general and abstract ideas correspond | 403 |
CHAPTER II | 425 |
Absence of the indicated circumstancesWant of attentionWant | 86 |
OF SENSATIONS OF HEARING AND THEIR ELEMENTS | 99 |
Psychology stands with reference to them as Chemistry did with | 106 |
SENSATIONS OF SIGHT OF SMELL OF TASTE OF TOUCH AND THEIR | 117 |
OF THE PHYSICAL CONDITIONS OF MENTAL EVENTS | 151 |
the knowledge of our present state for a simple and spiritual act | 260 |
of a body is formedAnimal portion of this conceptionHuman | 298 |
appear extended and continuousConsequently the bodies which | 302 |
Circumstances increasing the precision and force of the imageIn | 322 |
PAGE | 432 |
Laws concerning Possible Things | 449 |
Two kinds of proof for the theorems of the socalled Sciences | 481 |
CHAPTER III | 487 |
Laws in which the intermediate is a sum of simultaneous general | 498 |
Convergence of all the preceding conclusionsThey indicate that | 525 |
Recapitulation of the inductive proofs which make us believe in | 534 |
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abstract character action animal appear aroused attention Baillarger become body brain Brierre de Boismont capable colour complete conceive concrete psychologies consciousness consequently corpora quadrigemina corresponding degrees dency denote distinct distinguish dream E. L. Thorndike effect elementary sensations elements excited experience external eyes fact feel figure hallucination hear ideas illusion imagine impression infinite instance intense internal kind language less Maury means ment mental mental events mind movements muscles muscular sensations myriagon nerve nervous centres object observed operation optic nerve ordinary ourselves pain passed patient Paul Morphy perceive perception person phantoms polygon portion precise present produced properties psychology racters recall recollections representation retina revival rience Sancergues sation sensations of sight sense sight similar simple sleep smell sometimes somnambulism somnambulists sound special reductive spontaneous substitute taste tendency term things tion touch tree Tuileries vague whole word