The American Journal of Psychology, المجلد 15

الغلاف الأمامي
Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, Madison Bentley, Edwin Garrigues Boring, Margaret Floy Washburn
University of Illinois Press, 1904
 

طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات

عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

مقاطع مشهورة

الصفحة 569 - that the bodily changes follow directly the perception of the exciting fact, and that our feeling of the same changes as they occur is the emotion
الصفحة 351 - that God has this or that idea, not in so far as He is infinite, but in so far as He is manifested through the nature of the human mind, or constitutes the essence of the human mind.
الصفحة 351 - that conscious thinking thing, whatever substance made up of (whether spiritual or material, simple or compound, it matters not), which is sensible or conscious of pleasure and pain, capable of happiness or misery, and so is concerned for itself, as far as that consciousness extends. Thus
الصفحة 198 - without which there can be no relative facts. Every feeling and thought being but transitory — an entire life made up of such feelings and thoughts being also but transitory — nay, the objects amid which life is passed, though less transitory, being severally in course of losing their individualities, quickly or slowly: we
الصفحة 159 - from him the immortal principle of the soul; and around this they proceeded to fashion a mortal body, and made it to be the vehicle of the soul, and constructed within the body a soul of another nature which was mortal, subject to terrible and irresistible affections
الصفحة 196 - are only two different series of phenomena or qualities; as unknown and unknowable they are the two substances in which these two different series of phenomena or qualities are supposed to inhere. The existence of an unknown substance is an inference we are compelled to make from the
الصفحة 375 - a man has as many social selves as there are individuals who recognize him and carry an image of him in their mind.
الصفحة 566 - that the true source of the life of science is to be found: not, indeed, in admitting now a fragment of the one view, and now a fragment of the other, but in showing how absolutely universal is the extent and at the same time how completely subordinate the significance of the mission which mechanism has to fulfill in the structure of the world.
الصفحة 159 - part of the soul which desires meats and drinks and the other things of which it has need by reason of the bodily nature, they placed between the midriff and the boundary of the navel, contriving in all this region a sort of manger for the food of the body.
الصفحة 351 - which is called passivity of the soul, is a confused idea, whereby the mind affirms concerning its body, or any part thereof, a force for existence, greater or less than before and by the presence of which the mind is determined to think of one thing rather than another.

معلومات المراجع