| John Stuart Mill - 1843 - 648 Seiten
...depend upon physical conditions ; and the influence of physiological states or physiological changes ill altering or counteracting the mental successions,...most important departments of psychological study. § 3. The subject, then, of Psychology, is the uniformities of succession, the laws, whether ultimate... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1843 - 654 Seiten
...undervalued. It must by no means be forgotten that the laws of mind may be derivative laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth therefore may ultimately depend upon physical conditions ; and tlie influence of physiological states or physiological changes in altering... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1846 - 630 Seiten
...laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth, therefore, may ultimately depend upon physical conditions ; and the influence of physiological...most important departments of psychological study. § 3. The subject, then, of Psychology, is the uniformities of succession, the laws, whether ultimate... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1846 - 624 Seiten
...and that their truth, therefore, may ultimately depend upon physical conditions ; and the inffuence of physiological states or physiological changes in...most important departments of psychological study. § 3. The subject, then, of Psychology, is the uniformities of succession, the laws, whether ultimate... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1853 - 370 Seiten
...undervalued. It must by no means be forgotten that the laws of mind may be derivative laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth, therefore, may ultimately depend upon physical conditions ; and the influence of physiological states or physiological changes in altering... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1856 - 560 Seiten
...undervalued. It must by no means be forgotten that the laws of mind may be derivative laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth therefore...reject the resource of psychological analysis, and construct the theory of the mind solely on such data as physiology at present affords, seems to me... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1862 - 572 Seiten
...undervalued. It must by no means be forgotten that the laws of mind may be derivative laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth therefore...reject the resource of psychological analysis, and construct the theory of the mind solely on such data as physiology at present affords, seems to me... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1871 - 372 Seiten
...undervalued. It must by no means be forgotten that the laws of mind may be derivative laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth, therefore, may ultimately depend upon physical conditions ; and the influence of physiological states or physiological changes in altering... | |
| Théodule Ribot - 1873 - 382 Seiten
...more general, there is a distinct and separate science of mind. The relations, indeed, of that science to the science of physiology must never be overlooked...therefore may ultimately depend on physical conditions. . . . But on the other hand, to reject the resource of psychological analysis, and construct the theory... | |
| 1874 - 806 Seiten
...part), Mill is quite prepared to admit that " the laws of mind may be derivative laws resulting from laws of animal life, and that their truth, therefore, may ultimately depend on physical conditions." But the probability of this genesis being shown, he apparently regards as so remote that it is not... | |
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