Remarks on the Influence of Mental Cultivation and Mental Excitement Upon Health (2d Ed., 1833): And Observations on the Influence of Religion Upon the Health and Physical Welfare of Mankind (1835).Influential early works discussing psychological effects of excessive intellectual & religious stimulation. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page 6
... diseases of the heart ; upon self - education , and upon the Sunday Schools of this country . He would again express the hope that his country- men , and particularly those who have the care of youth , would give more attention than ...
... diseases of the heart ; upon self - education , and upon the Sunday Schools of this country . He would again express the hope that his country- men , and particularly those who have the care of youth , would give more attention than ...
Page 11
... disease..34 SECTION III . Consequences which have resulted from inattention to the connexion between the mind and ... diseases of the heart .. .76 SECTION VI . Remarks upon moral education - Influence of.
... disease..34 SECTION III . Consequences which have resulted from inattention to the connexion between the mind and ... diseases of the heart .. .76 SECTION VI . Remarks upon moral education - Influence of.
Page 12
... disease .. - TABLE , ..102 Exhibiting the age attained by some of the most distin- guished literary persons in ancient and modern times ... 123 INFLUENCE OF MENTAL CULTIVATION UPON HEALTH . THE influence which xii CONTENTS .
... disease .. - TABLE , ..102 Exhibiting the age attained by some of the most distin- guished literary persons in ancient and modern times ... 123 INFLUENCE OF MENTAL CULTIVATION UPON HEALTH . THE influence which xii CONTENTS .
Page 15
... disease in children which I have witnessed , I am forced to believe that the danger is indeed great , and that very often in attempting to call forth and cul- tivate the intellectual faculties of children before they are five or six or ...
... disease in children which I have witnessed , I am forced to believe that the danger is indeed great , and that very often in attempting to call forth and cul- tivate the intellectual faculties of children before they are five or six or ...
Page 20
... disease , such a possibility would tend to destroy the hope of its immortality which we gain from reason ; for that which is capable of disease and decay may die . Besides , it would be natural to expect that mere men- tal derangement ...
... disease , such a possibility would tend to destroy the hope of its immortality which we gain from reason ; for that which is capable of disease and decay may die . Besides , it would be natural to expect that mere men- tal derangement ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action affections Anatomy Andrew Combe apoplexy appears attend school attention awaken become blood brain Broussais cause chil child cure death delicate diet digestive organs disorder distinguished dren dyspepsia dyspeptic early mental England Esquirol exercise exhibited fact feelings females fever France frequently gastritis Germany Greece Hartford head hypochondriasis important increased inflammation injury inquiry insane persons instances intel intellectual faculties intoxicating irritation Italy James Johnson knowledge learned lived manifested material organ memory ment MENTAL CULTIVATION mental derangement mental excitement mental faculties mental labor mental powers mind and body moral faculties nature necessary nervous system observation opinion organic disease parents passions Phrenology physical education physician portion possess precocity premature development prodigies produced proper Prussia recollection regard remarks respecting rickets says school discipline Sciences Scotland stimulating stomach Switzerland symptoms teachers tion trepanned truth writers young youth
Popular passages
Page 66 - The mind ought never to be cultivated at the expense of the body ; and physical education ought to precede that of the intellect, and then proceed simultaneously with it, without cultivating one faculty to the neglect of others ; for health is the base, and instruction the ornament of education.
Page 101 - ... motive to industry, together with a care to husband his earnings, and to avoid unnecessary expense. The poor man who has gained a taste for good books, will in all likelihood become thoughtful ; and when you have given the poor a habit of thinking, you have conferred on them a much greater favour than by the gift of a large sum of money, since you have put them in possession of the principle of all legitimate prosperity.
Page 63 - I foresaw, with grief, the fate that awaited them. They commenced their career as prodigies, and finished by becoming idiots, or persons of very weak minds. The age of infancy is consecrated by nature to those exercises which fortify and strengthen the body, and not to study, which enfeebles it, and prevents its proper increase and development.
Page 66 - ... and who do not learn to read and write until the constitution begins to be consolidated, but who enjoy the benefit of a good physical education, very soon surpass, in their studies, those who commence earlier and read numerous books when very young.
Page 118 - Should the body sue the mind before a court of judicature for damages, it would be found that the mind would prove to have been a ruinous tenant to its landlord.
Page 30 - I distinctly saw the pulsation of the brain was regular and slow ; but at this time he was agitated by some opposition to his wishes, and directly the blood was sent with increased force to the brain, the pulsation became frequent and violent ; if, therefore...
Page 81 - ... should either become excessive by too strong excitement, or suppressed by misdirected education. If here was the proper place, it would be easy to show that efforts to make females excel in certain qualities of mind which in men are considered most desirable, — to make them as capable as men...
Page 100 - Yet this personage came out of this wild kind of discipline, graced with the rarest combination of qualifications for enjoying existence, achieving fame, and blessing society. Deeply learned, though neither the languages, nor the philosophy of the schools, made part of his...
Page 3 - The purpose of education is to give to the body and to the soul all the beauty and all the perfection of which they are capable.
Page 112 - How often do physicians fail to afford any relief by medicines, in what are called ' stomach affections,' but which are readily cured by travelling, or relaxation in accustomed studies, and freedom from care and anxiety ! How often a change of the mental excitement affords relief. It seems as if certain portions of the brain having been unduly excited, became diseased, and were benefited by strong excitement of other portions of the same organ. How often are stomach affections cured by inert medicines,...