| Frederick Howard Collins - 1901 - عدد الصفحات: 718
...The changes which, regarded as modes of the Non-Ego, have been expressed in the foregoing divisions in terms of motion, have now, regarded as modes of the Ego, to be expressed in terms of feeling. Accepting the belief, alike popular and scientific, that all the human beings known objectively have... | |
| George Stuart Fullerton - 1904 - عدد الصفحات: 652
...presents to us objectively. "Now, however, we turn to a totally distinct aspect of our i Chapter XVIII. subject. There lies before us a class of facts absolutely...their outsides, we have to contemplate them from their insides."1 I shall not here comment upon Mr. Spencer's suggestion that it is the one series of changes... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1910 - عدد الصفحات: 666
...disapproved by those who regard words not as counters but as money. been due to lack of fit words—words free from unfit associations. As already said, the...this expression implies that these changes can be simultaneously seen by more than one, which is not true. Rigorously limiting the proposition to that... | |
| Borden Parker Bowne - 1912 - عدد الصفحات: 464
...have been formulated in terms of Matter and Motion. . . . Now, however, we turn to a totally distinct aspect of our subject. There lies before us a class...outsides, we have to contemplate them from their insides." ("Principles of Psychology," vol. i, p. 97.) This passage is a little embarrassing, as presenting us... | |
| Borden Parker Bowne - 1912 - عدد الصفحات: 464
...In other words, we have to treat of nervous phenomena as phenomena of consciousness. The changes 358 which, regarded as modes of the Non-Ego, have been...outsides, we have to contemplate them from their insides." ("Principles of Psychology," vol. i, p. 97.) This passage is a little embarrassing, as presenting us... | |
| Nicholas Churchich - 2005 - عدد الصفحات: 540
...forces and his rudimentary psychical acts are indistinguishable from the merely physical movements. 'The changes which, regarded as modes of the non-ego,...regarded as modes of the ego, to be expressed in terms of feeling'.12 No explanation can be given between states of consciousness and its mechanism. The process... | |
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