[247]. One sees the same phenomenon in every-day life. Let a person acquire under a sense of injury a dislike of one who previously was a friend, and every sentiment involving friendship, admiration, esteem, gratitude, loyalty, etc., is repressed with a complete change of attitude. Politics furnishes many examples.
[248]. Exemplified in Miss B. by Sally, in O. N. by the b mood, and in B. C. A. by phase B, and also in the earlier stages of the case by phase A.
[249]. My Life as a Dissociated Personality, Jl. Ab. Psychol., December-January, 1908-9.
[250]. The Mental State of Hystericals, p. 205.
[251]. The Dissociation, cf. Index: “Emotion, the Disintegrating Effect of,” and Chapters XXVIII and XXIX.
[252]. The Dissociation, p. 462.
[253]. We shall study in other lectures the forces and mechanisms which effected the dissociation in this case.
[254]. See Morton Prince: Some of the Present Problems of Abnormal Psychology, St. Louis Congress of Arts and Sciences (1904), Vol. 5, p. 772; also, The Psychological Review, March-May, 1905, p. 139.
[255]. Probably derived from the “will to believe,” the desire to please the experimenter, or other elements in the hypnotic setting. The conception of a “censor” or desire to protect the personal consciousness from something painful is an unnecessary complication.
[256]. The Dissociation.