Страница - 152Страница - 154INDEX OF SUBJECTS
- Absent-minded acts, conservation of, [50].
- Affective states, suppression of, by conflict, [455].
- Affects, see Emotion.
- as conative force of ideas, [448].
- linking of, to ideas fundamental for the pathology of the psychoneuroses, [449].
- Amnesia, continuous, [76];
- Anxiety neurosis, emergence of emotion from a subconscious idea in, [382], [526].
- Association neuroses, [279], [527].
- Association psychoses, [278].
- Bashfulness as resultant of emotional conflict, [520].
- Behavior, acquired and instinctive, [237], [238];
- conscious and unconscious, [230].
- Coconscious, the meaning of the, [247–254].
- Coconscious ideas, [168], [249], [254].
- Coconscious processes, auto-analysis of the content of, [171], [176].
- Complex of ideas, definition of a, [265].
- Complexes (systematized), dissociated, as phases of multiple personality, [299–302].
- emotional, [267];
- Subject systems, [284];
- alternation of, [288];
- in dissociated personality, [288].
- Chronological systems, [290];
- Mood systems, [294];
- regarded as a “side to one’s character,” [295];
- illustrated by William Sharp, [296].
- unconscious, organization of, in hypnotic and other dissociated conditions, [302–306];
- in pathological states, [305];
- in psychotherapeutics, [288–289], [304];
- underlying the individual, social, civic and national conscience, public opinion, Sittlichkeit, etc., [307].
- Conflict, from conative force of emotion, [71], [454].
- Conflict between emotional impulses, [454];
- and sentiments, [455].
- between two subconscious processes, [480].
- general phenomena of, [488]:
- contraction of field of consciousness and personality, [489–492];
- the hysterical state, [492];
- systematized dissociation, [492–504];
- systematized anesthesia, [492];
- contracted personality, [496];
- change of sentiments, [497];
- alternation of personality, [501];
- multiple personality, [502];
- amnesia, [508–517];
- subconscious traumatic memories, [517];
- mental confusion, [519–521];
- bashfulness, [520];
- self-consciousness, [521].
- suppression of instincts and affective states by, [454–458].
- Confusion (mental), as resultant of emotional conflicts, [519];
- Conservation, meaning of, [12].
- a residuum of experience, [87].
- considered as psychological residua, [110];
- as coconscious ideas, [111];
- as an undifferentiated psyche, [115];
- as physical residua, [117];
- as neural dispositions, [117].
- evidence of, furnished by automatic writing, [15];
- Conservation, of absent-minded acts, [50]
- of forgotten artificial states, [62];
- of forgotten dreams and somnambulisms, [59].
- of forgotten experiences of normal life, [15].
- of forgotten pathological states, [68]
- of inner life, [85].
- of subconscious perceptions, [52].
- Decerebrate Animal, behavior of, [231].
- intelligent behavior of, [240].
- Dissociation, due to conflict, [71], [469], [472–475], [480], [487], [488], [492–504].
- Dreams, as a type of hallucinatory phenomena, [222].
- Emotion, see Affects.
- amnesia, as resultant of, [514–517].
- emergence of, from subconscious ideas, [382–386], [387–388], [391], [485].
- general psychopathology of, [440–442].
- James-Lange theory of, [423], [453].
- physiological manifestations of, [423];
- changes in circulation, [424];
- modifications of volume and action of heart, [424];
- of respiratory apparatus, [426];
- of glandular secretions, [426];
- of the functions of the digestive glands, [426];
- of the movements of the stomach and intestines, [426];
- of salivary secretion, [431];
- of secretion of ductless glands, [431];
- of pupils, [433];
- of muscular system, [433];
- the psycho-galvanic reflex, [435].
- physiological symptoms of, caused by subconscious ideas, [377–381].
- phenomena of, due to subconscious processes, [103].
- provides the impulsive force of an instinct, [447];
- one of chief functions of, [451].
- psycho-physiological schema of manifestations of emotion, [441];
- physiological mimicry of disease, [442].
- sensory accompaniments of, [453].
- Emotion, sensory disturbances caused by, [438].
- the central psychical element in an innate reflex process, [446].
- the conative function of, [451], [452–460];
- discharge of force in three directions, [452].
- Emotions, as the prime-movers of all human activity, [450];
- organization of, with ideas essential for self-control, etc., [451], [458].
- primary and compound, [446].
- Emotional discharge from subconscious processes, evidence for, [481].
- Emotional reactions, acquired, do not always involve subconscious processes, [418].