The American Journal of Psychology, Volume 22Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, Madison Bentley, Edwin Garrigues Boring, Margaret Floy Washburn University of Illinois Press, 1911 - Psychology |
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Page 3
... mental functions . Between three of the subjects ( RED , ORANGE and GREEN ) there is practically no such individual difference at any stage of practice , but in general the effect of practice seems to be to bring all the subjects near ...
... mental functions . Between three of the subjects ( RED , ORANGE and GREEN ) there is practically no such individual difference at any stage of practice , but in general the effect of practice seems to be to bring all the subjects near ...
Page 5
... mental processes , is of too fluctuating a nature to leave any characteristic impress on the form of the distribu- tions . Contemporaneous with the free association experiment , the first five women subjects underwent practice in two ...
... mental processes , is of too fluctuating a nature to leave any characteristic impress on the form of the distribu- tions . Contemporaneous with the free association experiment , the first five women subjects underwent practice in two ...
Page 15
... mental reaction than would be possible in any other way . This last characteristic brings this study into connection at some points with the three important studies of the present time , viz .: the study of mental types , the study of ...
... mental reaction than would be possible in any other way . This last characteristic brings this study into connection at some points with the three important studies of the present time , viz .: the study of mental types , the study of ...
Page 34
... mental operation For instance : " Truth seeks no corner . " ( Obs . Ms. ph , 4. Time— ) " Read it in the same way as before . and ' corner ' . I had no visual image . ' square place ' came by association . There was a slight feeling of ...
... mental operation For instance : " Truth seeks no corner . " ( Obs . Ms. ph , 4. Time— ) " Read it in the same way as before . and ' corner ' . I had no visual image . ' square place ' came by association . There was a slight feeling of ...
Page 49
... mental nod and frown are clean and delicately traced . ” He wonders why James does not take the same introspective view of his ' feeling of relation ' as he does with the feeling of a ' central active self ' in which he ( James ) finds ...
... mental nod and frown are clean and delicately traced . ” He wonders why James does not take the same introspective view of his ' feeling of relation ' as he does with the feeling of a ' central active self ' in which he ( James ) finds ...
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Common terms and phrases
affective analysis aphasia apraxia apraxic association attention attitude auditory auditory imagery binaural ratio blue color color-blind comic complex consciousness corpus callosum Deut Deuteranope direction Displacement toward axis dreams experimental experiments fact feeling Freud function Galton whistle given gives green grey Herero imagery impulse intensity introspections kinęsthetic Lagrange's formula later laughter learning Leipzig letter localization meaning median plane memory image ment mental method Miss G. S. monaural monocular mother motor movements muscular nature normal object observers occurred organic sensations patient perception present psychic psychoanalysis Psychol psychology psychometric functions Rayleigh reaction relation reported repressed right eye sciousness seems sense sensory sexual sound stimulus stronger ear suggestion syllables synęsthesia tactual tendency tests theory thought tion Titchener tones uncon unconscious verbal idea Visual image words writer yellow
Popular passages
Page 42 - Likewise the idea of man that I frame to myself, must be either of a white, or a black, or a tawny, a straight or a crooked, a tall or a low, or a middle-sized man.
Page 347 - ALL THE perceptions of the human mind resolve themselves into two distinct kinds, which I shall call impressions and ideas. The difference betwixt these consists in the degrees of force and liveliness with which they strike upon the mind and make their way into our thought or consciousness.
Page 604 - Women announces the offer of a third prize of 200!. for the best thesis written by a woman, on a scientific subject, embodying new observations and new conclusions based on an independent laboratory research in biological, chemical, or physical science.
Page 541 - For, whatever the thought we are criticising may think about its present self, that self comes to its acquaintance, or is actually felt, with warmth and intimacy. Of course this is the case with the bodily part of it ; we feel the whole cubic mass of our body all the while, it gives us an unceasing sense of personal existence. Equally do we feel the inner 'nucleus of the spiritual self...
Page 480 - I had, also, during many years, followed a golden rule, namely, that whenever a published fact, a new observation or thought came across me, which was opposed to my general results, to make a memorandum of it without fail and at once; for I had found by experience that such facts and thoughts were far more apt to escape from the memory than favourable ones.
Page 319 - Kant's Prolegomena. To any Future Metaphysics. Edited in English by Paul Carus, with an Essay on Kant's Philosophy and other supplementary material for the study of Kant. 60c. (2s. 6d.) St.
Page 488 - Few people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentment when they find that their name has been forgotten, particularly if it is by some one with whom they had hoped or expected it would be remembered. They instinctively realize that if they had made a greater impression on the person's mind he would certainly have remembered them again, for the name is an integral part of the personality.
Page 347 - The difference betwixt these consists in the degrees of force and liveliness with which they strike upon the mind and make their way into our thought or consciousness. Those perceptions which enter with most force and violence we may name impressions; and under this name I comprehend all our sensations, passions, and emotions, as they make their first appearance in the soul. By ideas I mean the faint images of these in thinking and reasoning...
Page 497 - Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was answered. She did ill. But, oh, how I love her for it ! His name was Harry Oxford. . . . She did not waver, she cut the links, she signed herself over. Oh, brave girl, what do you think of me ? But I have no Harry Whitford ; I am alone" . . . the sudden consciousness that she had put another name for Oxford, struck her a buffet, drowning her in crimson.
Page 509 - The use of keys is a fertile source of occurrences of this kind, of which two examples may be given. If I am disturbed in the midst of some engrossing work at home by having to go to the hospital to carry out some routine work, I am very apt to find myself trying to open the door of my laboratory there with the key of my desk at home, although the two keys are quite unlike each other. The mistake unconsciously demonstrates where I would rather be at the moment. "Some years ago I was acting in a subordinate...