[23] See [Chapter II].
[24] “Principles of Psychology,” Vol. II, p. 884.
[25] Froebel is too often ignorantly accused of being “soft,” but it is a mistake to think that he leaves fear out of count. What he insists on is, that rightly used authority should produce self-control, not servility.
[27] Macmillan, 1906.
[29] “Social Psychology,” p. 61.
[30] Mr. McDougall allows (p. 60) that in the case of an unprovoked blow, the impulse, the thwarting of which provokes anger, is the impulse of self-assertion.
[31] For example, on p. 46, “Hence language provides special names for such modes of affective experience, names such as anger, fear, curiosity”; and on p. 94, in connection with the sympathetic induction of emotion, we have, “Later still, fear, curiosity, and, I think, anger are communicated readily from one child to another”; and there are other examples.