The American Journal of Psychology, المجلد 14Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, Madison Bentley, Edwin Garrigues Boring, Margaret Floy Washburn University of Illinois Press, 1903 |
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طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
20 trials 20 trials-W absolute pitch accommodation æsthetic Algonkian apparatus Arithmetic Mean associated attention auditory balls binocular binocular vision child Clark University clouds color consciousness curve dark days direction effect effort Empiristic ergograph estimation experimental experiments eyes fact factor fancies fatigue feeling fusion G. S. Hall give given guesses habit habitual functioning Hillebrand idea images influence intensity introspection investigation Jour judgment less light limens means ment mental processes method mind Minor Third monocular moon movement muscles muscular nature nervous never night non-habitual object observer organs perception period phalanx physiological play practice present problem psychology psychophysical pulse rays reaction Recession record retinal retrograde amnesia rêve rise screen seems sensation space perception stimulus tendency tests theory thought tion tone tube twilight variation vision visual visual perception winks Wundt
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 64 - Shine for us with thy best rays, thou bright Dawn, thou who lengthenest our life, thou the love of all, who givest us food, who givest us wealth in cows, horses, and chariots. Thou, daughter of the sky, thou high-born Dawn, whom the Vasishthas magnify with songs, give us riches high and wide : all ye gods, protect us always with your blessings.
الصفحة 152 - It is, I think, agreed by all that Distance, of itself and immediately, cannot be seen. For, distance being a line directed endwise to the eye, it projects only one point in the fund of the eye, which point remains invariably the same, whether the distance be longer or shorter.
الصفحة 153 - And first, it is certain by experience that when we look at a near object with both eyes, according as it approaches or recedes from us, we alter the disposition of our eyes, by lessening or widening the interval between the pupils. This disposition or turn of the eyes is attended with a sensation, which seems to me to be that which in this case brings the idea of greater or lesser distance into the mind.
الصفحة 216 - It is interesting that all the subjects improved by hitting upon better ways of working without any further conscious selection, at first, than the general effort to succeed. There seems to be a competition of methods. Just how this selection occurs without conscious interference is not easy to say. Consciousness discovers modes of action already in use, and selects some of them for survival because of their success. They then pass into the automatic.
الصفحة 418 - Lotze — Is Esthetics a Science ? — The German Science — Are the German Universities Declining ? — Fowler's Locke and German Psychology — Spiritualism in Germany — Recent Studies in Hypnotism — Popular Science in Germany — A Note on Hegel, his Followers and Critics — Hartmann's New System of Pessimistic Ethics — The Latest German Philosophical Literature — Democritus and Heraclitus — The Muscular Perception of Space — Laura Bridgman — The Perception of Color — A Note...
الصفحة 153 - Secondly, An object placed at a certain distance from the eye, to which the breadth of the pupil bears a considerable proportion, being made to approach, is seen more confusedly: And the nearer it is brought the more confused appearance it makes. And this being found constantly to be so, there...
الصفحة 65 - ... and one at each of the cardinal points. The twelve men of the east placed twelve turquoises at the east of the faces. The twelve men of the south placed twelve white-shell beads at the south. The twelve men of the west placed twelve turquoises at the west. Those of the north placed twelve white-shell beads at that point.
الصفحة 97 - ... has revolutionized and almost re-created school hygiene ; made adolescence, a strange word ten years ago, one of the most pregnant and suggestive for both science and education ; given us the basis of a new religious psychology; and laid the foundation of a new and larger philosophy and psychology...
الصفحة 356 - ... has its good sense and value; but since in practical life we know and speak of types, there is no harm in attempting to come to an agreement as to just what is to be understood by them. Physiology and psychology and anthropology have attempted it with their own specific problems; we physicians have our own, and while we deplore the lack of medically helpful material in the existing literature of individual psychology, we need not be discouraged, and shall do well to use our own methods and needs...
الصفحة 423 - Printed by the College, NY, 1897. pp. 230-244. 97. INTRODUCTION TO HT LUKENS' ' CONNECTION BETWEEN THOUGHT AND MEMORY,' Sept. 17, 1895. DC Heath & Co., Boston, 1895. 98. EDITORIAL ON EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY IN AMERICA. Am. Jour. of Psychology, Oct., 1895. Vol. 7, pp. 3-8. Letters on above from James, Ladd, Baldwin, Cattell. Science, Nov. 8, 1895. Vol. 2. (NS), pp. 626-528. Reply by Dr. Hall, Science, Nov. 29, 1895. Vol. 2 (NS), pp.