Illusions: A Psychological Study
AUTHOR OF SENSATION AND INTUITION, PESSIMISM, ETC.
LONDON KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH & CO., 1, PATERNOSTER SQUARE 1887
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The present volume takes a wide survey of the field of error, embracing in its view not only the illusions of sense dealt with in treatises on physiological optics, etc., but also other errors familiarly known as illusions, and resembling the former in their structure and mode of origin. I have throughout endeavoured to keep to a strictly scientific treatment, that is to say, the description and classification of acknowledged errors, and the explanation of these by a reference to their psychical and physical conditions. At the same time, I was not able, at the close of my exposition, to avoid pointing out how the psychology leads on to the philosophy of the subject. Some of the chapters were first roughly sketched out in articles published in magazines and reviews; but these have been not only greatly enlarged, but, to a considerable extent, rewritten.
J. S.
Hampstead, April, 1881.
Common sense, knowing nothing of fine distinctions, is wont to draw a sharp line between the region of illusion and that of sane intelligence. To be the victim of an illusion is, in the popular judgment, to be excluded from the category of rational men. The term at once calls up images of stunted figures with ill-developed brains, half-witted creatures, hardly distinguishable from the admittedly insane. And this way of thinking of illusion and its subjects is strengthened by one of the characteristic sentiments of our age. The nineteenth century intelligence plumes itself on having got at the bottom of mediæval visions and church miracles, and it is wont to commiserate the feeble minds that are still subject to these self-deceptions.
According to this view, illusion is something essentially abnormal and allied to insanity. And it would seem to follow that its nature and origin can be best studied by those whose speciality it is to observe the phenomena of abnormal life. Scientific procedure has in the main conformed to this distinction of common sense. The phenomena of illusion have ordinarily been investigated by alienists, that is to say, physicians who are brought face to face with their most striking forms in the mentally deranged.
James Sully
ILLUSIONS
JAMES SULLY
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
THE STUDY OF ILLUSION.
CHAPTER II.
THE CLASSIFICATION OF ILLUSIONS.
CHAPTER III.
ILLUSIONS OF PERCEPTION: GENERAL.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
DREAMS.
NOTE.
CHAPTER VIII.
ILLUSIONS OF INTROSPECTION.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
ILLUSIONS OF MEMORY.
NOTE.
MOMENTARY ILLUSIONS OF SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS.
CHAPTER XI.
ILLUSIONS OF BELIEF.
CHAPTER XII.
RESULTS.
INDEX.
THE END
FOOTNOTES: