[617] Why not say 'know'?—W. J.
[INDEX.]
[A.] [B.] [C.] [D.] [E.] [F.] [G.] [H.] [I.] [J.] [K.] [L.] [M.] [N.] [O.] [P.] [Q.] [R.] [S.] [T.] [U.] [V.] [W.] X. Y. [Z.]
Authors the titles only of whose works are cited are not, as a rule, referred to in this index.
Abbott, T. K., II. 221
Abstract ideas, I. [468], [508]; II. 48
Abstract qualities, II. 329-37, 340
Abstraction, I. [505]; II. 346 ff. See [distraction]
Accommodation, feeling of, II. 93, 235
Acquaintance, I. [220]
Acquired characters, see [inheritance]
Acquisitiveness, II. 422, 679
Actors, their emotions whilst playing, II. 464
Adaptation of mind to environment results in our knowing the impressing circumstances, II. 625 ff.
Æsthetic principles, II. 639, 672
After-images, I. [645-7]; II. 67, 200, 604
Agoraphobia, II. 421
Agraphia, I. [40], [62]
Alfieri, II. 543
Allen, G., I. [144]; II. 631
Alteration of one impression by another one simultaneously taking place, II. 28 ff., 201
Alternating personality, I. [379] ff.
Ambiguity of optical sensations, II. 231-7
Amidon, I. [100]
[Amnesia] in hysterical disease, I. [384] ff.;
accompanies anæsthesia, [386], [682];
in hypnotic trance, II. 602.
See [forgetting]
Amputated limbs, feeling of, II. 38-9, 105
Anæsthesia, in hysterics, I. [203] ff.;
involves correlated amnesia, [386];
movements executed during, II. 105, 489-92, 520-1;
and emotion, 455-6;
in hypnotism, 606-9
Analogies, the perception of, I. [530]
Analysis, I. [502]; II. 344
Anger, II. 409, 460, 478
[Aphasia], motor, I. [37], [62];
sensory, I. [53-4-5];
optical, I. [60];
amnesia in, [640], [684]; II. 58
Apperception, II. 107 ff.
Apperception, transcendental Unity of, I. [362]
Appropriateness, characterizes mental acts, I. [13]
Apraxia, I. [52]
[A priori] connections exist only between objects of perception and movements, not between sensory ideas, II. 581.
A priori ideas and experience, Chapter XXVIII.
A priori propositions, II. 661-5
Archer, W., II. 464
Arithmetic, II. 654.
Articular sensibility, II. 189 ff.
Association, [Chapter XIV]:
is not of ideas, but of things thought of, I. [554];
examples of, [555] ff.;
its rapidity, [557] ff.;
by contiguity, [561];
elementary law of, [566];
'mixed' association, [571];
conditions of, [575] ff.;
by similarity, [578];
three kinds of association compared, [580];
in voluntary thought, [583];
by contrast, [593];
history of the doctrine of, [594];
association the means of localization, II. 158 ff.;
connection of association by similarity with reasoning, 345 ff.
Associationism, I. [161]
Associationist theory of the self, I. [342], [350] ff.;
of space-perception, II. 271 ff.
Asymbolia, I. [52]
Attention, [Chapter XI]: to how many things possible, I. [405] ff.;
to simultaneous sight and sound, [411] ff.;
its varieties, [416];
passive, [417];
voluntary, [420] ff.;
its effects, [424] ff.;
its influence on reaction-time, [427-34];
accompanied by feelings of tension due to adaptation of sense-organs, [434-8];
involves imagination or preperception of object, [438-44];
conceivable as a mere effect, [448] ff.
Aubert, H., II. 235
Auditory centre in brain, I. [52-6]
Auditory type of imagination, II. 60
'Ausfallserscheinungen,' I. [75]
Automatic writing, I. [393] ff.
Austen, Jane, I. [571]
[Automaton-Theory,] [Chapter V]:
postulated rather than proved, I. [134-8];
reasons against it, [138-144];
applied to attention, [448]
disregarded in this book, II. 583
Azam, Dr., I. [380].
Babe and candle, scheme of, I. [25]
Baby's first perception, II. 8, 84;
his early instinctive movements, 404 ff.
Bær, von, I. [639]
Bagehot, W., I. [582]; II. 283, 308
Bain, on series conscious of itself, I. [162];
on self-esteem, [313];
on self-love, [328], [354];
on attention, [444];
on association, [485], [530], [561], [589], [601], [653]; II. 6, 12, 69, 186, 271, 282, 296, 319, 322, 372-3, 463, 466, 551, 554-5
Ballard, I. [266]
Balzac, I. [374]
Bartels, I. [432]
Bastian, H. C., II. 488
Baumann, II. 409
Baxt, I. [648]
Beaunis, E., II. 492
Bechterew, I. [407]
Belief, Chapter XXI:
in sensations, II. 299 ff.;
in objects of emotion, 306 ff.;
in theories, 311 ff.;
and will, 319.
See [reality]
Bell, C., II. 483, 492
Bergson, J., II. 609
Berkeley, I. [254], [469], [476]; II. 43, 49, 77, 212, 240, 666
Bernhardt, II. 502
Bernheim, I. [206]
Bertrand, A., II. 518
Bessel, I. [413]
Binet, A., I. [203] ff.; II. 71, 74, 128 ff., 130, 167, 491, 520
Black, R. W., II. 339
Bleek, II. 358
Blind, the, their space-perception, II. 202 ff.;
after restoration to sight, 211-2;
hallucination of a blind man, 323;
dreams of the, 44
Blindness, mental, I. [41], [50], [66]. See [Sight], [Hemianopsia], etc.
Blix, II. 170
Bloch, II. 515
Blood, its exciting effect on the nerves, II. 412-3
Blood, B. P., II. 284
Blood-supply to brain, I. [97]
Bourne, A., I. [391]
Bourru, Dr., I. [388]
Bowditch, H. P., his reaction-timer, I. [87];
on contrast in seen motion, II. 247;
on knee-jerk, 380;
comparison of touch and sight, 520
Bowen, F., I. [214]
Bowne, B. P., on knowledge, I. [219]
Bradley, F. H., I. [452], [474], [604]; II. 7, 9, 284, 648
Brain, its functions, Chapter II:
of frog, I. [14];
of dog, [33];
of monkey, [34];
of man, [36];
lower centres compared with hemispheres, [9-10], [75];
circulation in, [97];
instability, [139];
its connection with Mind, [176];
'entire' brain not a real physical fact, [176];
its changes as subtle as those of thought, [234];
its dying vibrations operative in producing consciousness, [242]
Influence of environment upon it, [626] ff.
Brain-process, see [neural process]
Brain-structure, the two modes of its genesis, II. 624
Brentano, I. [187], [547]
Bridgeman, Laura, II. 62, 358, 420
Broca's convolution, I. [39], [54]
Brodhun, I. [542]
Brown, Thos., I. [248], [277], [371]; II. 271
Brown-Séquard, I. [43], [67], [69]; II. 695
Brutes, the intellect of, II. 348 ff.
Bucke, R. M., II. 460
Bubnoff, I. [82]
Burke, II. 464
Burnham, W. H., I. [689]
Burot, Dr., I. [388]
Caird, E., I. [366], [469], [471], II. ff.
Calmeil, A., II. 524
Campanella, II. 464
Campbell, G., I. [261]
Cardaillac, I. [247]
Carlyle, T., I. [311]
Carpenter, W. B., on formation of habits, I. [110];
ethical remarks on habit, [120];
mistakes in speech, [257];
lapses of memory, [374];
on not feeling pain, [419];
on ideo-motor action, II. 522
Carville, I. [69]
Catalepsy, I. [229]; II. 583
Cattell, on reaction-time, I. [92], [432]; [524];
on recognition, [407], [648];
on attention, [420];
on association-time, [558] ff.
Cause, consciousness a, I. [187]; II. 583, 592
Centres, cortical, I. [30] ff.;
motor, [31];
visual, [41];
auditory, [52];
olfactory, [57];
gustatory, [58];
tactile, [58]
Cerebral process, see [neural process]
Cerebrum, see [Brain], [Hemispheres]
Chadbourne, P A., II. 383
Characters, general, II. 329 ff.
Charcot, I. [54-5]; II. 58, 596
Chloroform, I. [531]
Choice, see [selection], [interest]
Circulation in brain, I. [97];
effects of sensory stimuli upon, II. 374 ff.;
in grief, 443-4
Classic and romantic, II. 469
Classifications, II. 646
Clay, E. C. R., I. [609]
Cleanliness, II. 434
Clearness, I. [426]
Clifford, I. [130-2]
Clouston, II. 114, 284-5, 537, 539
Cobbe, F. P., I. [374]
Cochlea, theory of its action, II. 169
Cognition, see [knowing]
Cohen, H., I. [365]
Coleridge, S. T., I. [572], [681]
Collateral innervation, see [vicarious function]
Comparison, [Chapter XIII]:
relations discovered by comparison have nothing to do with the time and space order of their terms, II. 641;
mediate, 489, 644;
see [difference], [likeness]
Composition, of Mind out of its elements, see [Mind-Stuff theory];
differences due to, I. [491]
Comte, A., I. [187]
Conceivability, I. [463]
[Conceptions,] [Chapter XII]:
defined, I. [461];
their permanence, [464] ff.;
do not develop of themselves, [466] ff.;
abstract, [468];
universal, [478];
essentially teleological, II. 332
Conceptual order different from perceptual, I. [482]
Concomitants, law of varying, I. [506]
Confusion, II. 352
Consciousness, its seat, I. [65];
its distribution, [142-3];
its function of selection, [139-41];
is personal in form, [225];
is continuous, [237], [488];
of lack, [251];
of self not essential, [273];
of object comes first, [274];
always partial and selective, [284] ff., see [Selection];
of the process of thinking, [300] ff.;
the span of, [405]
Consent, in willing, II. 568
Considerations, I. [20]
Constructiveness, II. 426
Contiguity, association by, I. [561]
Continuity of object of consciousness, I. [488]
Contrast, of colors, II. 13-27;
of temperatures, 14;
two theories of, 17 ff., 245;
of movements, 245 ff., 250
Convolutions, motor, I. [41]
Cortex, of brain, experiments on, I. [31] ff.
Cramming, I. [663]
Credulity, our primitive, II. 319
Cudworth, R., II. 9
'Cue,' the mental, II. 497, 518
Cumberland, S., II. 525
Curiosity, II. 429
Czermak, II. 170, 175
Darwin, C., II. 432, 446, 479, 484, 678, 681-2-4
Darwinism, scholastic reputation of, II. 670
Data, the, of psychology, I. [184]
Davidson, T., I. [474]
Deaf-mute's thought in infancy, I. [266]
Deafness, mental, I. [50], [55-6]. See [hearing]
Dean, S., I. [394]
[Decision,] five types of, II. 531
Degenerations, descending in nerve-centres, I. [37], [52]
Delabarre, E., II. 13-27, 71
Delbœuf, J., I. [455], [531], [541], [542], [548-9]; II. 100, 189, 249, 264, 605, 609, 612
Deliberation, II. 528 ff.
Delusions, insane, I. [375]; II. 114 ff.
Depth, see [third dimension]
Descartes, I. [180], [200], [214], [344]
Destutt de Tracy, I. [247]
Determinism must be postulated by psychology, II. 576
Dewey, J., I. [473]
Dichotomy in thinking, II. 654
Dickens, C., I. [374]
Dietze, I. [407], [617]
[Difference], not resolvable into composition, I. [490];
noticed most between species of a genus, [529];
the magnitude of, [531];
least discernible, [537] ff.;
methods for ascertaining, [540] ff.
Difference, local, II. 167 ff.;
genesis of our perception of, 642
Diffusion of movements, the law of, II. 372
Dimension, third, II. 134 ff., 212 ff., 220
Dipsomania, II. 543
Disbelief, II. 284
Discrimination, [Chapter XIII]:
conditions which favor it, I. [494];
improves by practice, [508];
spatial, II. 167 ff.
See [difference]
Dissociation, I. [486-7];
law of, by varying concomitants, [506]
Dissociation, ditto, II. 345, 359
Dissociation, of one part of the mind from another, see [Janet, Pierre]
Distance, between terms of a series, I. [530]
Distance, in space, see [third dimension]
Distraction, I. [401]. See [inattention]
Dizziness, see [vertigo]
Dog's cortical centres, after Ferrier, I. [33];
after Munk, I. [44-5];
after Luciani, I. [46], [53], [58], [60];
for special muscles, [64];
hemispheres ablated, [70]
Donaldson, II. 170
Donders, II. 235
Double images, II. 225-30, 252
Doubt, II. 284, 318 ff.;
the mania of, 545
Dougal, J. D., II. 222
Drainage of one brain-cell by another, II. 583 ff.
Dreams, II. 294
Drobisch, I. [632], [660]
Drunkard, II. 565
Drunkenness, I. [144]; II. 543, 565, 628
Dualism of object and knower, I. [218], [220]
Duality, of Brain, I. [390], [399]
Dudley, A. T., on mental qualities of an athlete, II. 539
Dufour, II. 211
Dunan, Ch., II. 176, 206, 208-9
Duration, the primitive object in time-perception, I. [609];
our estimate of short, [611] ff.
'Dynamogeny,' II. 379 ff., 491
Ebbinghaus, H., I. [548], [676]
Eccentric projection of sensations, II. 31 ff., 195 ff.
Education of hemispheres, I. [76]
See [pedagogic remarks]
Effort, II. 534-7;
Muscular effort, 562;
Moral effort, 549, 561, 578-9
Egger, V., I. [280-1-2]; II. 256
Ego, Empirical, I. [291] ff.;
pure, [342] ff.;
'transcendental,' [362];
criticised, [364]
Elementary factors of mind, see [Units of consciousness]
Elsas, I. [548]
Emerson, R. W., I. [582], II. 307
Emotion, Chapter XXV:
continuous with instinct, II. 442;
description of typical emotions, 443-9;
results from reflex effects of stimulus upon organism, 449 ff.;
their classification, 454;
in anæsthetic subjects, 455;
in the absence of normal stimulus, 458-60;
effects of expressing, 463 ff.;
of repressing, 466;
the subtler, 469 ff.;
the neural process in, 472;
differences in individuals, 474;
evolution of special emotions, 477 ff.
Empirical ego, I. [290]
Empirical propositions, II. 644
Emulation, II. 409
Ennui, I. [626]
Entoptic sensations, I. [515] ff.
Equation, personal, I. [413]
'Equilibration,' direct and indirect, II. 627
[Essences,] their meaning, II. 329 ff.;
sentimental and mechanical, 665
Essential qualities, see [essences]
Estel, I. [613], [618]
Evolutionism demands a 'mind-dust,' I. [146]
Exner, on human cortical centres, I. [36];
on 'circumvallation' of centres, [65];
his psychodometer, [87];
on reaction-time, [91];
on perception of rapid succession, [409];
on attention, [439];
on time-perception, [615], [638], [646];
on feeling of motion, II. 172
[Experience,] I. [402], [487];
Relation of experience to necessary judgments, Chapter XXVIII;
Experience defined, II. 619 ff., 628
Experimentation in psychology, I. [192]
Extradition of sensations, II. 31 ff., 195 ff.
Fallacy, the Psychologist's, I. [196], [278], [153]; II. 281
Familiarity, sense of, see [recognition]
Fatalism, II. 574
Fatigue, diminishes span of consciousness, I. [640]
Fear, instinct of, II. 396, 415;
the symptoms of, 446;
morbid, 460;
origin of, 478
Fechner, I. [435-6], [533], [539] ff., [549], [616], [645]; II. 50, 70, 137 ff., 178, 464
Feeling, synonym for consciousness in general in this book, I. [186];
feelings of relation, [243]
Félida X., I. [380-4]
Féré, Ch., II. 68, 378 ff.
Ferrier, D., I. [31],
[46-7-8], [53], [57-8-9], [445]; II. 503
Ferrier, Jas., I. [274], [475]
Fiat, of the will, II. 501, 526, 561, 564; 568.
See [decision]
Fichte, I. [365]
Fick, I. [150]
Fiske, J., II. 577
Fixed ideas. See [insistent ideas]
Flechsig's Pyramidenbahn, I. [37]
Flint, R., II. 425
Flourens, P., I. [30]
Force, supposed sense of, II. 518
Forgetting, I. [679] ff.; II. 870-1. See [amnesia]
Fouillée, A., II. 500, 570
François-Franck, I. [70]
Franklin, Mrs. C. L., II. 94
Franz, Dr., II. 63
Freedom, of the will, II. 569 ff.
'Fringe' of object, I. [258], [281-2], [471-2], [478]
Frog's nerve-centres, I. [14]
Fusion of feelings unintelligible, I. [157-62]; II. 2. See [Mind-stuff theory]
Fusion of impressions into one object, I. [484], [502]; II. 103, 183
Galton, F., I. [254], [265], [685];
on mental imagery, II. 51-7;
on gregariousness, 430
[General propositions], what they involve, II. 337 ff. See [universal conceptions]
Genesis of brain-structure, its two modes, II. 624
Genius, I. [423], [530]; II. 110, 352, 360
Gentleman, the mind of the, II. 370
Geometry, II. 658
Giddiness, see [vertigo]
Gilman, B. I., I. [95]
Gley, E., II. 514-5, 525
Goldscheider, II. 170, 192 ff., 200
Goltz, I. [9], [31], [33], [34], [45], [46], [58], [62], [67], [69], [70], [74], [77]
Gorilla, II. 416
Graefe, A., II. 507, 510
Grashey, I. [640]
Grassman, R., II. 654
Gregariousness, II. 430
Green, T. H., I. [247], [274], [366-8]; II. 4, 10, 11
Grief, II. 448, 480
Griesinger, W., II. 298
Grubelsucht, II. 284
Guinea-pigs, epileptic, etc., II. 682-7
Guislain, II. 546
Gurney, E., I. [209]; II. 117, 130, 469, 610
Guyau, II. 414, 469
Habit, [Chapter IV]:
due to plasticity of brain-matter, I. [105];
depends on paths in nerve-centres, [107];
origination of, [109-13];
mechanism of concatenated habits, [114-8];
they demand some sensation, [118];
ethical and pedagogic maxims, [121-7];
is the ground of association, [566];
of memory, [655]
Habits may inhibit instincts, II. 394;
Habit accounts for one large part of our knowledge, 632
Hall, G. S., I. [96-7], [558], [614], [616]; II. 155, 247, 281, 423
Hallucination, sensation a veridical, II. 33;
of lost limbs, 38, 105;
of emotional feeling, 459
[Hallucinations,] II. 114 ff.;
hypnagogic, 124;
the brain-process in, 122 ff.;
hypnotic, 604
Hamilton, W., I. [214], [215], [274], [406], [419], [569], [578], [682]; II. 113
Hammond, E., II. 673
Haploscopic method, II. 226
Harless, II. 497
Hartley, I. [553], [561], [564], [600]
Hartmann, R., II. 416
Hasheesh-delirium, II. 121
[Hearing], its cortical centre, I. [52]
Heat, of mental work, I. [100]
Hecker, II. 480
Hegel, I. [163], [265], [366], [369], [666]
Heidenhain, I. [82]
Helmholtz, H., I. [285];
on attention, [422], [487], [441];
on discrimination, [504], [516-21];
time as a category, [637-8];
after-images, [645], [648];
on color-contrast, II. 17 ff.;
on sensation, 33;
on cochlea, 170;
on convergence of eyes, 200;
vision with inverted head, 213;
on what marks a sensation, 218 ff., 243-4;
on entoptic objects, 241-2;
on contrast in seen movement, 247;
on relief, 257;
on measurement of the field of view, 266 ff.;
on theory of space-perception, 279;
on feeling of innervation, 493, 507, 510;
on conservation of energy, 667
Hemiamblyopia, I. [44]
Hemianopsia, I. [41], [44]; II. 73
Hemispheres, their distinction from lower centres, I. [20];
their education, [24], [67];
localization of function in, [30];
the exclusive seat of consciousness, [65];
effects of deprivation of, on frogs, [17], [72-3];
on fishes, [73];
on birds, [74], [77];
on rodents, [74];
on dogs, [70], [74];
on primates, [75];
not devoid of connate paths, [76];
their evolution from lower centres, [79]
Henle, J., II. 445, 461, 481
Herbart, I. [353], [418], [603], [608], [626]
Hereditary transmission of acquired characters, see [inheritance]
Hering, E., on attention, I. [438], [449];
on comparing weights, [544];
on pure sensation, II. 4;
on color-contrast, 20 ff.;
on roomy character of sensations, 136 ff.;
on after-images and convergence, 200;
on distance of double images, 230;
on stereoscopy, 252;
on reproduction in vision, 260 ff.;
on movements of closed eye, 510
Herzen, I. [58];
on reaction-time from a corn, [96];
on cerebral thermometry, [100];
on swooning, [273]
Hitzig, I. [31]
Hobbes, T., I. [573], [587], [594] ff.
Hodgson, R., I. [374], [398]
Hodgson, S. H., on inertness of consciousness, I. [129-30], [133];
on self, [341], [347];
on conceptual order, [482];
on association, [572] ff., [603];
on voluntary redintegration, [588-9];
on the 'present' in time, [607]
Höffding, H., I. [674]; II. 455
Holbrook, M. H., I. [665]
Holmes, O. W., I. [88], [405], [582]
Holtei, von, I. [624]
Horopter, II. 226
Horsley, V., I. [35], [59], [63]
Horwicz, I. [314], [325-7]
Howe, S. G., II. 358
Human intellect, compared with that of brute, II. 348 ff.;
depends on association by similarity, 353 ff.;
various orders of, 360;
what brain-peculiarity it depends on, 366, 638
Hume, I. [254];
on personal identity, [351-3], [360];
association, [597];
due to brain-laws, [564];
on mental images, II. 45-6;
on belief, 295-6, 302;
on pleasure and will, 558
Hunting instinct, II. 411
Huxley, I. [130-1], [254]; II. 46
Hyatt, A., II. 102
Hylozoism, see [Mind-stuff theory]
Hyperæsthesia, in hypnotism, II. 609
[Hypnotism], I. [407]; II. 128, 351;
general account of, Chapter XXVII;
methods, II. 593;
theories of, 596;
symptoms of trance, 602 ff.;
post-hypnotic suggestion, 618
[Hysterics], their so-called anæsthesias, and unconsciousness, I. [202] ff.
Ideal objects, eternal and necessary relations between, II. 639, 661.
See [conception]
'Ideas,' the theory of, I. [230];
confounded with objects, [231], [276], [278], [399], [521];
they do not exist as parts of our thought, [279], [405], [553];
platonic, [462];
abstract, [468] ff.;
universal, [473] ff.;
never come twice the same, [480-1]
Ideation, no distinct centres for, I. [564]; II. 78
Identity, sense of, I. [459];
three principles of, [460];
not the foundation of likeness, [492]
Identity, personal, I. [238], [330] ff.;
based on ordinary judgment of sameness, [334];
due to resemblance and continuity of our feelings, [336];
Lotze on, [350];
only relatively true, [372]
Ideo-motor action the type of all volition, II. 522
Idiosyncrasy, II. 631
'Idomenians,' II. 214
Illusions, II. 85 ff., 129, 232 ff., 243-66.
See [hallucination]
Images, double, in vision, II. 225-30
Images, mental, not lost in mental blindness, etc., I. [50], [66]; II. 73
Images, are usually vague, II. 45;
visual, 51 ff.;
auditory, 160;
motor, 61;
tactile, 165;
between sleep and waking, 124-6
Imagination, Chapter XVIII:
it differs in individuals, II. 51 ff.;
sometimes leaves an after-image, 67;
the cerebral process of, 68 ff.;
not locally distinct from that of sensation, 73;
is figured, 82
Imitation, II. 408
Immortality, I. [348-9]
Impulses, morbid, II. 542 ff. See [instincts]
Impulsiveness of all consciousness, II. 526 ff.
[Inattention], I. [404], [455] ff.
Increase, serial, I. [490]
Indeterminism, II. 569 ff.
Ingersoll, R., II. 469
Inheritance of acquired characters, II. 367, 678 ff.
Inhibition, I. [43], [67], [404]; II. 126, 373;
of instincts, 391, 394;
of one cortical process by another, 583
Innervation, feeling of, II. 236, 493;
it is unnecessary, 494 ff.;
no evidence for it, 499, 518
Innervation, collateral, see [vicarious function]
Insane delusions, I. [375]; II. 113
[Insistent ideas,] II. 545
[Instinct.] Chapter XXIV;
defined, II. 384;
is a reflex impulse, 385 ff.;
is neither blind nor invariable, 389;
contrary instincts in same animal, 392;
man has more than other mammals, 393, 441;
their transitoriness, 398;
special instincts, 404-441;
the origin of instincts, 678
'Integration' of feelings, Spencer's theory of, I. [151] ff.
[Intelligence,] the test of its presence, I. [8];
of lower brain-centres, [78] ff.
Intention to speak, I. [253]
[Interest], I. [140], [284] ff., [402-3], [482], [515] ff., [572], [594]; II. 312 ff., 344-5, 634
Intermediaries, the axiom of skipped, II. 646
Introspection, I. [185]
Inverted head, vision with, II. 213
Jackson, Hughlings, I. [29], [64], [400]; II. 125-6
Janet, J., I. [385]
Janet, Paul, I. [625]; II. 40-1
[Janet, Pierre,] I. [203] ff., [227], [384] ff., [682]; II. 456, 614
Jastrow, I. [88], [543], [545]; II. 44, 135, 180
Jevons, W. S., I. [406]
Joints, their sensibility, II. 189 ff.
Judgments, existential, II. 290
Justice, II. 673
Kandinsky, V., II. 70, 116
Kant, I. [274], [331], [344], [347];
his 'transcendental' deduction of the categories, [360];
his paralogisms, [362];
criticised, [363-6];
on time, [642];
on symmetrical figures, II. 150;
on space, 273 ff.;
on the real, 296;
on synthetic judgments a priori, 661,
and their relation to experience, 664
Kinæsthetic feelings, II. 488 ff., 493
'Kleptomania,' II. 425
Knee-jerk, II. 380
[Knowing], I. [216] ff.;
psychology assumes it, [218];
not reducible to any other relation, [219], [471], [688]
Knowledge, two kinds of, I. [221];
of Self not essential to, [274];
the relativity of, II. 9 ff.;
the genesis of, 630 ff.
Knowledge-about, I. [221]
König, I. [542]
Kries, von, I. [96], [547]; II. 253
Krishaber, I. [377]
Kussmaul, A., I. [684]
Ladd, G. T., I. [687]; II. 3, 311
Lamarck, II. 678
Landry, II. 490, 492
Lange, A., I. [29], [284]
Lange, C., II. 443, 449, 455, 457, 460, 462
Lange, K., II. 111
Lange, L., on reaction-time, muscular and sensorial, I. [92]
Lange, N., on muscular element in imagination, I. [444]
Language, as a human function, II. 356-8
Laromiguèire, I. [247]
Laughter, II. 480
Lazarus, I. [624], [626]; II. 84, 97, 369, 429
Le Conte, Joseph, II. 228, 252, 265
Léonie, M. Janet's trance-subject, I. [201], [387] ff.
Levy, W. H., II. 204
Lewes, on frog's sp. cord, I. [9], [78], [134];
on thought as a sort of algebra, [270];
on 'preperception,' [439], [442];
on muscular feeling, II. 199;
on begging in pup, 400;
on lapsed intelligence, 678
Lewinski, II. 192
Liberatore, II. 670
Liebman, O., on brain as a machine, I. [10]; II. 34
Liégeois, J., II. 594, 606
Light, effects of, on movement, II. 379
[Likeness], I. [528]
Lindsay, T. L., II. 421
Lipps, on 'unconscious' sensations, I. [175];
on theory of ideas, [603];
time-perception, [632];
on muscular feeling, II. 200;
on distance, 221;
on visual illusions, 251, 264;
on space-perception, 280;
on reality, 297;
on effort, 575
Lissauer, I. [50]
Local signs, II. 155 ff., 167
Localization, in hemispheres, I. [30] ff.
Localization, II. 153 ff.;
of one sensible object in another, II. 31 ff., 183 ff., 195 ff.
Locke, J., I. [200], [230], [247], [349], [390], [462], [483], [553], [563], [679]; II. 210, 306, 644, 662-4
'Locksley Hall,' I. [567]
Locomotion, instinct of, II. 405
Loeb, I. [33], [44]; II. 255, 516, 628
[Logic], II. 647
Lombard, J. S., I. [99]
Lombard, W., II. 380
Lotze, I. [214];
on immortality, [349];
on personal identity, [350];
on attention, [442-3];
on fusion and discrimination of sensations, [522];
on local signs, II. 157, 495;
on volition, 523-4
Louis V., I. [388]
Love, sexual, II. 437, 543;
parental, 439;
Bain's explanation of, 551
Lowell, J. R., I. [582]
Luciani, I. [44-5-6-7], [53], [60]
McCosh, I. [501]
Mach, E., on attention, I. [436];
on space-feeling, [449];
on time feeling, [616], [635];
on motion-contrast, II. 247;
on optical inversion, 255;
on probability, 258;
on feeling of innervation, 509, 511
Magnitude of differences, I. [530] ff.
Malebranche, II. 9
Manouvrier, II. 496
Mania, transitory, II. 460
Man's intellectual distinction from brutes, II. 348 ff.
Mansel, H. L., I. [274]
Mantegazza, P., II. 447, 479, 481
Marcus Aurelius, I. [313], [317]; II. 675
Marillier, L., I. [445]; II. 514
Marique, I. [65]
Martin, H. N., I. [99]; II. 3
Martineau, J., I. [484] ff., [506]; II. 9
Maudsley, H., I. [113], [656]
Maury, A., II. 83, 124, 127
Mechanical philosophy, the, II. 666 ff.
Mechanism vs. intelligence, I. [8-14]
Mediate comparison, I. [489]
Mediumship, I. [228], [393] ff.
Mehner, I. [618]
Memory, [Chapter XVI]:
it depends on material conditions, I. [2];
the essential function of the hemispheres, [20];
lapses of, [373] ff.;
in hysterics, [384] ff.;
favored by attention, [427];
primary, [638], [643];
analysis of the phenomenon of Memory, [648];
the return of a mental image is not memory, [619];
memory's causes, [653] ff.;
the result of association, [654];
conditions of good memory, [659];
brute retentiveness, [660];
multiple associations, [662];
improvement of memory, [667] ff.;
its usefulness depends on forgetting much, [680];
its decay, [683];
metaphysical explanations of it, [687] ff.
Mentality, the mark of its presence, I. [8]
Mental operations, simultaneous, I. [408]
Mercier, C., on inertness of consciousness, I. [135];
on inhibition, II. 583
Merkel, I. [542-3-4]
Metaphysical principles, II. 669 ff.
Metaphysics, I. [137], [401]
Meyer's experiment on color-contrast, II. 21
Meyer, G. H., II. 66, 97-8
Meynert, T., his brain-scheme, I. [25], [64], [72]
Mill, James, I. [277], [355], [470], [476], [485], [499], [597], [651], [653]; II. 77
Mill, J. S., I. [189];
on unity of self, [356-9];
on abstract ideas, [470];
methods of inquiry, [590];
on infinitude and association, [600];
on space, II. 271;
on belief, 285, 822;
on reasoning, 331;
on the order of Nature, 634;
on arithmetical propositions, 654
Mills, C. K., I. [60]
Mimicry, its effects on emotion, II. 463-6
Mind, depends on brain-conditions, I. [4], [553];
the mark of its presence, [8];
difficulty of stating its connection with brain, [176];
what psychology means by it, [183], [216]
[Mind-Stuff theory], [Chapter VI]:
a postulate of evolution, I. [146], [176];
some proofs of it, [148];
author's interpretation of them, [154];
feelings cannot mix, [157] ff., II. 2, 103
Miser, associationist explanation of the, II. 423 ff.
Mitchell, J. K., II. 616
Mitchell, S. W., I. [381]; II. 38-9, 380
Modesty, II. 435
Moll, A., II. 616
Molyneux, II. 210
Monadism, I. [179]
Monism, I. [366-7]
Monkey's cortical centres, I. [34-5], [46], [59]
Montgomery, E., I. [158]
Moral principles, II. 639, 672
Morris, G. S., I. [365]
Mosso, on blood-supply to brain, I. [97-9]
plethysmographic researches, II. 378;
on fear, 419, 483
Motor centres, I. [31] ff.
'Motor circle,' II. 583
Motor strands, I. [38];
for special muscles, I. [64]
Motor type of imagination, II. 61
Movement, perception of, by sensory surfaces, II. 171 ff.;
part played by, in vision, 197, 203, 234-7
the, Production of, Chap. XXII
requires guiding sensations, 490
illusory perception of, during anæsthesia, 489;
results from every kind of consciousness, 526
Mozart, I. [255]
Müller, G. E., I. [445], [456-8]; II. 198, 280, 491, 502, 508, 517
Müller, J., I. [68]; II. 640
Müller, J. J., II. 213
Müller, Max, I. [269]
Munk, H., I. [41-3-4-5-6], [57-8-9], [63]
Münsterberg, on Meynert's scheme, I. [77];
on reaction times with intellectual operation, [432]:
on association, [562];
on time-perception, [620], [637];
on imagination, II. 74;
on muscular sensibility, 189;
on volition, 505;
on feeling of innervation, 514;
on association, 590
Muscles, how represented in nerve-centres, I. [19]
Muscle-reading, II. 525
Muscular sense, its cortical centre, I. [61];
its existence, II. 189 ff., 197 ff.;
its insignificance in space-perception, 197-203, 234-7
Music, its accidental genesis, II. 627; 687
Mussey, II. 543
Mutilations, inherited, II. 627
Myers, F. W. H., I. [400]; II. 133
Mysophobia, II. 435, 545
Nature, the order of, its incongruence with that of our thought, II. 634 ff.
Naunyn, I. [55]
Necessary truths are all truths of comparison, II. 641 ff., 651, 662.
See [experience], , etc.
Neiglick, I. [543]
[Neural process], in perception. I. [78] ff.;
in habit, [105] ff.;
in association, [566];
in memory, [655];
in imagination, II. 68 ff.;
in perception, 82 ff., 103 ff.;
in hallucination, 122 ff.;
in space-perception, 143;
in emotion, 474;
in volition, 580 ff.;
in association, 587 ff.
Nitrous oxide intoxication, II. 284
Nonsense, how it escapes detection, I. [261]
Normal position in vision, II. 238
Nothnagel, I. [51], [60-1]
Number, II. 653
Obersteiner, I. [87], [445]
Object, use of the word, I. [275], [471];
confusion of, with thought that knows it, [278]
Objective world, known before self, I. [273];
its primitive unity, [487-8];
ditto, II. 8
Objects versus ideas, I. [230], [278]
Old-fogyism, II. 110
Orchansky, I. [95]
'Overtone' (psychic), I. [258], [281-2]
Pain, I. [143],
its relations to the will, II. 549 ff., 583-4
Paneth, I. [64], [65]
Parallelism, theory of, between mental and cerebral phenomena, see [Automaton-theory]
Paresis of external rectus muscle, II. 236, 507
Parinaud, II. 71
Partiality of mind, see [interest], [teleology], [intelligence], [selection], [essences]
Past time, known in a present feeling, I. [627];
the immediate past is a portion of the present duration-block, [608] ff.
Patellar reflex, II. 380
Paths through cortex, I. [71];
their formation, [107-12]; II. 584 ff.;
association depends on them, 567 ff.;
memory depends on them, 655 ff., 661, 686
Paulhan, F., I. [250], [408], [670]; II. 64, 476
[Pedagogic remarks]: I. [121-7]; II. 110, 401-2, 409, 463, 466
Perception. Chapter XIX:
compared with sensation, II. 1, 76;
involves reproductive processes, 78;
is of probable objects, 82 ff.;
not an unconscious inference, 111 ff.;
rapidity of, 131
Perception-time, II. 131
Perez, B., I. [446]; II. 416
Personal equation, I. [413]
Personality, alterations of, I. [373] ff.
Pflüger, on frog's spinal cord, I. [9], [134]
Philosophies, their test, II. 312
Phosphorus and thought, I. [101]
[Phrenology], I. [27]
Pick, E., I. [669]
Pitres, I. [206]
Planchette-writing, I. [208-9], [393] ff.
Plasticity, as basis of habit, defined, I. [105]
Platner, II. 208
Plato, I. [462]
Play, II. 427
Pleasure, as related to will, I. [143]; II. 549, 583-4
[Points, identical,] theory of, II. 222 ff.
Possession, Spirit-, I. [393] ff.
Post-hypnotic suggestion, II. 613
Practical interests, their effects on discrimination, I. [515] ff.
Prayer, I. [316]
'Preperception,' I. [439]
Present, the present moment, I. [606] ff.
Preyer, II. 403
Probability determines what object shall be perceived, II. 82, 104, 258, 260-3
Problematic conceptions, I. [463]
Problems, the process of solution of, I. [584]
Projection of sensations, eccentric, II. 31 ff.
[Projection], theory of, II. 228
Psychologist's fallacy, the, see [Fallacy]
Psychophysic law, I. [539]
Pugnacity, II. 409
Pure Ego, I. [342]
Putnam, J. J., I. [61]
Questioning mania, II. 284
Rabier, I. [470], [604]
Rational propositions, II. 644
Rationality is based on apprehension of series, II. 659
Rationality, postulates of, II. 670, 677
Rationality, sense of, I. [260-4]; II. 647
[Reaction-time], I. [87];
simple, [88];
what it measures is not conscious thought, [90];
Lange's distinction between muscular and sensorial, [92];
its variations, [94-7];
influenced by expectant attention, [427] ff.;
after intellectual process, [432];
after discrimination, [523];
after association, [557];
after perception, II. 131
Real size and shape of visual objects, II. 179, 237 ff.
[Reality], the Perception of, Chapter XXI;
not a distinct content of consciousness, II. 286;
various orders of, 287 ff.;
every object has some kind of reality, 291 ff.;
the choice of, 290;
practical, 293 ff.;
means relation to the self, 295-8;
relation of sensations to, 299;
of emotions, 306
Reason, I. [551]. See [Logic]
Reasoning, Chapter XXII;
its definition, II. 325;
involves the picking out of essences, or sagacity, 329;
and abstraction, 332;
its utility depends on the peculiar constitution of this world, 337 ff., 651;
depends on association by similarity, 345
Recall, I. [578], [654]
'Recepts,' II. 327, 349, 351
[Recognition,] I. [673]
Recollection, voluntary, I. [585] ff.
Redintegration, I. [569]
'Reductives,' II. 125, 291
Reflex acts, I. [12];
reaction-time measures one, [90];
concatenated habits are constituted by a chain of, [116]
Reid, Thomas, I. [609], [78]; II. 214, 216, 218, 240, 309
Relating principle, I. [687-8]
Relation, feelings of, I. [243] ff.;
space-relations, II. 148 ff.
Relations, inward, between ideas, II. 639, 642, 661, 671;
the principle of transferred, 646
Relief, II. 254-7. See [third dimension]
Renouvier, Ch., I. [551]; II. 309
Reproduction in memory, I. [574] ff., [654];
voluntary, [585] ff.
Resemblance, I. [528]
Respiration, effects of sensory stimuli upon, II. 376
Restitution of function, I. [67] ff.
Restoration of function, I. [67] ff.
Retention in memory, I. [653] ff.
Retentiveness, organic, I. [659] ff.;
it is unchangeable, [663] ff.
Retinal image, II. 92
Retinal sensibility, see [vision], [space], [identical points], [third dimension], [projection], etc.
Revival in memory, I. [574] ff., [654]
Reynolds, Mary, I. [381]
Ribot, Th., I. [375];
on attention, [444], [446], [680], 682
Richet, Ch., I. [638], [644-6-7]
Riehl, A., II. 32
Robertson, G. C., I. [461]; II. 86
Romanes, G. J., II. 95, 132, 327-9, 349, 351, 355, 397
Romantic and classic, II. 469
Rosenthal, I. [78]
Ross, J., I. [56-7]
Royce, J., I. [374]; II. 316-7
Royer-Collard, I. [609]
Rutherford, II. 170
Sagacity, II. 331, 343
Sameness, I. [272], [459], [480]; II. 650
Schaefer, W., I. [35], [53], [59], [63]
Schiff, M., I. [58], [78], [100]
Schmid, I. [683]
Schmidt, H. D., II. 399-400
Schneider, G. H., on Habits, I. [112], [118-20];
on perception of motion, II. 173;
on evolution of movements, 380;
on instincts, 387-8, 411, 418, 439
Schopenhauer, II. 33, 273
Schrader, I. [72] ff.
Science, the genesis of, II. 665-9
Sea-sickness, susceptibility to, an accident, II. 627
Seat of consciousness, I. [65];
of Soul, [214];
of sensations, no original, II. 34
Sciences, the natural, the factors of their production, II. 633 ff.;
a Turkish cadi upon, 640;
postulate things with unchangeable properties, 656
Sciences, the pure, they express results of comparison exclusively, II. 641;
classifications, 646;
logic, 647;
mathematics, 653
Secretiveness, II. 432
Seguin, I. [48], [75]
[Selection], a cardinal function of consciousness, I. [284] ff., [402], [594]; II. 584;
of visual reality, II. 177 ff., 237;
of reality in general, 290, 294;
of essential quality, 333, 370, 634
Self, consciousness of, [Chap. X]:
not primary, I. [273];
the empirical self, I. [291];
its constituents, [292];
the material self, [292];
the social self, [293];
the spiritual self, [296];
resolvable into feelings localized in head, [300] ff.;
consciousness of personal identity, [330] ff.;
its alterations, [373] ff.
Self-feeling, I. [305] ff.
Self-love, I. [317];
the name for active impulses and emotions towards certain objects; we do not love our bare principle of individuality, [323]
Self-seeking, I. [307] ff.
Selves, their rivalry, I. [309] ff.
Semi-reflex acts, I. [13]
Sensation, does attention increase its strength? I. [425];
terminus of thought, [471]
Sensation, Chapter XVII;
distinguished from perception, II. 1, 76;
its cognitive function, 3;
pure sensation an abstraction, 3;
the terminus of thought, 7
Sensations, are not compounds, I. [158] ff.; II. 2;
their supposed combination by a higher principle, I. [687]; II. 27-30;
their influence on each other, II. 28-30;
their eccentric projection, 31 ff., 195 ff.;
their localization inside of one another, 183 ff.;
their relation to reality, 299 ff.;
to emotions, 453;
their fusion, see [Mind-stuff theory]
Sensationalism, I. [243];
criticised by spiritualism, [687]
Sensationalism, II. 5;
in the field of space-perception, criticised, 216 ff.;
its difficulties, 231-7;
defended, 237 ff., 517
Sergi, II. 34
Serial increase, I. [490]; II. 644
Series, II. 644-51, 659 ff.
Seth, A., II. 4
Sexual function, I. [22]
Shadows, colored, II. 25
Shame, II. 435
Shoemaker, Dr., I. [273]
Shyness, II. 430
Sight, its cortical centre, I. [41] ff., [66]
Sign-making, a differentia of man, II. 356
Signs, local, II. 155 ff.
Sigwart, C., II. 634-6
Sikorsky, II. 465
Similarity, I. [528]
Similarity, association by, I. [578]; II. 345, 353
Skin, discrimination of points on, I. [512]
Sleep, partial consciousness during, I. [213]
Sociability, II. 430
Somnambulism, see [hypnotism], [hysterics]
Soul, theory of the, I. [180];
inaccessibility of, [187];
its essence is to think (according to Descartes), [200];
seat of, [214];
arguments for its existence, [343] ff.;
an unnecessary hypothesis for psychology, [350];
compared with transcendental Ego, [365];
a relating principle, [499]
[Space,] the perception of, Chapter XX;
primitive extensity in three dimensions, II. 134-9;
spatial order, 145;
space-relations, 148;
localization in, 153 ff.;
how real space is mentally constructed, 166 ff.;
part played by movement in, 171-6;
measurement of extensions, 177 ff.;
synthesis of originally chaotic sensations of extension, 181 ff.;
part played by articular surfaces in, 189 ff.;
by muscles, 197 ff.;
how the blind perceive space, 203 ff.;
visual space, 211-268;
theory of identical points, 222;
of projection, 228;
difficulties of sensation-theory expounded and replied to, 231-268;
historical sketch of opinion, 270 ff.
Spalding, D. A., II. 396, 398, 400, 406
Span of consciousness, I. [405], [640]
Speech, the 'centre' of, I. [55];
its misleading influence in psychology, I. [194];
thought possible without it, [269].
See [Aphasia], [Phrenology]
Spencer, his formula of 'adjustment,' I. [6];
on formation of paths in nerve-centres, [109];
on chasm between mind and matter, [147];
on origin of consciousness, [148];
on 'integration' of nervous shocks, [151-3];
on feelings of relation, [247];
on unity of self, [354];
on conceivability, [464];
on abstraction, [506];
on association, [600];
on time perception, [622], [639];
on memory, [649];
on recognition, [673];
on feeling and perception, II. 113, 180;
on space-perception, 272, 282;
on genesis of emotions, 478 ff.;
on free-will, 576;
on inheritance of acquired peculiarities, 620 ff., 679;
on 'equilibration,' 627;
on genesis of cognition, 643;
on that of sociality and pity, 685
Spinoza, II. 288
Spir, A., II. 665, 677
'Spirit-control,' I. [228]
Spiritualist theory of the self, I. [342]; II. 5
Spiritualists, I. [161]
Stanley, Henry M., II. 310
Starr, A., I. [54], [56]
Statistical method in psychology, I. [194]
Steiner, I. [72-3]
Steinthal, I. [604]; II. 107-9
Stepanoff, II. 170
Stereoscope, II. 87
Stereoscopy, II. 223, 252. See [third dimension]
Sternberg, II. 105, 515
Stevens, I. [617]
Stevens, E. W., I. [397]
Story, Jean, I. [263]
Stream of Thought, [Chapter IX]:
schematic representations of, I. [279-82]
Stricker, S., II. 62 ff.
Strümpell, A., I. [376], [445], [489], [491]
Strümpell, Prof., II. 353
Stuart, D., I. [406], [427]
Stumpf. C, on attention, I. [426];
on difference, [493];
on fusion of impressions, [522], [530-3];
on strong and weak sensations, [547];
on relativity of knowledge, II. 11;
on sensations of extent, 219, 221
Subjective sensations, I. [516] ff.
Substance, spiritual, I. [345]
Substantive states of mind, I. [243]
Substitution of parts for wholes in reasoning, II. 330;
of the same for the same, 650
Subsumption, the principle of mediate, II. 648
Succession, not known by successive feelings, I. [628];
vs. duration, [609]
Suggestion, in hypnotism, II. 598-601;
post-hypnotic, 613
Suicide, I. [317]
Sully, J., I. [191]; II. 79, 221, 272, 281, 322, 425
Summation of stimuli, I. [82];
of elements of feeling, [151];
the latter is inadmissible, [158]
Superposition, in space-measurements, II. 177, 266 ff.
Symbols as substitutes for reality, II. 305
Sympathy, II. 410
Synthetic judgments a priori, II. 661-2
Systems, philosophic, sentimental, and mechanical, II. 665-7
Tactile centre, I. [58]
Tactile images, II. 65
Tactile sensibility, its cortical centre, I. [34], [61], [62]
Taine, H., on unity of self, I. [355];
on alterations of ditto, [376];
on recollecting, [658], [670];
On projection of sensations, II. 33;
on images, 48, and their 'reduction,' 125-6;
on reality, 291
Tàkacs, II. 490
Tarde, G., I. [263]
Taylor, C. F., II. 99
Tedium, I. [626]
[Teleology,] created by consciousness, I. [140-1];
essence of intelligence, [482]
involved in the fact of essences, II. 335;
its barrenness in the natural sciences, 665
Tendency, feelings of, I. [250-4]
Thackeray, W. M., II. 434
Thermometry, cerebral, I. [99]
'Thing,' II. 184, 259
Thinking, the consciousness of, I. [300] ff.
Thinking principle, I. [342]
[Third dimension] of space, II. 134 ff., 212 ff., 220
Thompson, D. G., I. [354]; II. 662
Thomson, Allen, I. [84]
Thought, synonym for consciousness at large, I. [186];
the stream of, [Chapter IX]:
it tends to personal form, [225];
same thought never comes twice, [231] ff.;
sense in which it is continuous, [237];
can be carried on in any terms, [260-8];
what constitutes its rational character, [269];
is cognitive, [271];
not made up of parts, [276] ff., II. 79 ff.;
always partial to some of its objects, I. [284] ff.;
the consciousness of it as a process, [300] ff.;
the present thought is the thinker, [369], [401];
depends on material conditions, [553]
'Thought reading,' II. 525
Time, occupied by neural and mental processes, see [reaction-time]
Time, unconscious registration of, I. [201]
Time, the perception of, [Chapter XV];
begins with duration, I. [609];
compared with perception of space, [610] ff.;
empty time not perceived, [619];
its discrete flow, [621], [637];
long intervals conceived symbolically, [622] ff.;
variations in our estimate of its length, [623] ff.;
cerebral process underlying, [627] ff.
Tischer, I. [524], [527]
Touch, cortical centre for, I. [58]
Trance, see [hypnotism]
Transcendentalist theory of the Self, I. [342], [360] ff.;
criticised, [363] ff.
Transitive states of mind, I. [243] ff.
Tschisch, von, I. [414], [560]
Tuke, D. H., II. 130, 413
Taylor, E. B., II. 304
Tympanic membrane, its tactile sensibility, II. 140
Tyndall, I. [147-8]
Ueberweg, I. [187]
Unconscious states of Mind, proofs of their existence, I. [164] ff.;
Objections, [164] ff.
Unconsciousness, I. [199] ff.;
in hysterics, [202] ff.;
of useless sensations, [517] ff.
Understanding of a sentence, I. [281]
[Units, psychic,] I. [151]
Unity of original object, I. [487-8]; II. 8, 183 ff.
[Universal conceptions,] I. [473]. See [general propositions]
Unreality, the feeling of, II. 298
Valentin, I. [557]
Varying concomitants, law of dissociation by, I. [506]
Vennum, Lurancy, I. [397]
Ventriloquism, II. 184
Verdon, R., I. [685]
[Vertigo,] II. 89;
Mental vertigo, 309;
optical, 506
[Vicarious function] of brain-parts, I. [69], [142]; II. 592
Vierordt, I. [616] ff.; II. 154, 172
Vintschgau, I. [95-6]
[Vision] with head upside down, II. 213
Visual centre in brain, I. [41] ff.
Visual space, II. 211 ff.
Visualizing power, II. 51-60
Vocalization, II. 407
Volition, see [Will]
Volkmann. A. W., II. 198, 252 ff.
Volkmann, W. von Volkmar, I. [627], [629], [631]; II. 276
Voluminousness, primitive, of sensations, II. 184
Voluntary thinking, I. [583]
Vulgarity of mind, II. 370
Vulpian, I. [73]
Wahle, I. [493]
Waitz, Th., I. [405], [632]; II. 436
Walking, in child, II. 405
Walter. J. E., I. [214]
Ward, J., I. [162], [454], [548], [562], [629], [633]; II. 282
Warren, J. W., I. [97]
Wayland, I. [347]
Weber, E. H., his 'law,' I. [537] ff.
On space-perception on skin, II. 141-2;
on muscular feeling, 198
Weed, T., I. [665]
Weissmann, A., II. 684 ff.
Wernicke's convolution, I. [39], [54-5]
'Wheatstone's experiment,' II. 326-7
Wigan, Dr., I. [390], [675]; II. 566-7
Wilbrand, I. [50-1]
[Will], Chapter XXVI;
involves memory of past acts, and nothing else but consent that they shall occur again, II. 487-518;
the memory may involve images of either resident or remote effects of the movement, 518-22;
ideo-motor action, 522-8;
action after deliberation, 528;
decision, 531;
effort, 535;
the explosive will, 537;
the obstructed will, 546;
relation of will to pleasure and pain, 549 ff.;
to attention, 561;
terminates in an 'idea', 567;
the question of its indeterminism, 569;
psychology must assume determinism, 576;
neural processes concerned in education of the will, 579 ff.
Will, relations of, to Belief, II. 320
Wills, Jas., I. [241]
Witchcraft, II. 309
Wolfe, H. K., I. [674], [679]
Wolff, Chr., I. [409], [651]
World, the peculiar constitution of the, II. 337, 647, 651-2
Writing, automatic, I. [393] ff.
Wundt, on frontal lobes, I. [64];
on reaction-time, [89-94], [96], [427] ff., [525];
on introspective method, [189];
on self-consciousness, [303];
on perception of strokes of sound, [407];
on perception of simultaneous events, [411] ff.;
on Weber's law, [534] ff.;
association-time, [557], [560];
on time-perception, [608], [612] ff., [620], [634].
on local signs, II. 155-7;
on eyeball-muscles, 200;
on sensations, 219;
on paresis of ext. rectus, 236;
on contrast, 250;
on certain illusions, 264;
on feeling of innervation, 266, 493;
on space as synthesis, 276;
on emotions, 481;
on dichotomic form of thought, 654
Zöllner's pattern, II. 232