[153] The sense of Individuality, of Extent, of Configuration, of Consistence, of Weight, of Colour.
[154] The sense of Localities, of Numeration, of Order, of Phenomena, of Time, of Method, of Artificial Language.
[155] The sense of Comparison, the sense of Causality.
[156] “Some of the affective faculties produce only a desire, an inclination.... I shall call them propensities.”—Observ. sur la Phrénol., &c. p. 124.
[157] “Other affective faculties are not restricted to a simple inclination, but something beyond; which is what is called sentiment or feeling.”—Ibid.
[158] “The intellectual faculties are also double: some of them know; others reflect.”—Essai Philosophique, &c. p. 225.
[159] “The faculties peculiar to man are happy in themselves, per se.”—Ibid. p. 167.
[160] Anat. et Phys. du Syst. Nerv. &c. t. iii. p. 27.
[161] See his Histoire des Phlegmas. Chron. 1808.
[162] See his work entitled, “De l’Irritation et de la Folie,” 1828.