Body and mind: their connection and mutual influence. Gulstonian lecture, Ausgabe 1431870 |
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Seite 7
... feeling and eschewing what is hurtful to it , as well as of feeling and ensuing what is beneficial to it . But the experiment on the frog may be made more striking and instructive . Touch with acetic acid the thigh of a decapitated frog ...
... feeling and eschewing what is hurtful to it , as well as of feeling and ensuing what is beneficial to it . But the experiment on the frog may be made more striking and instructive . Touch with acetic acid the thigh of a decapitated frog ...
Seite 11
... feeling and volition commonly mingle largely in its functions , and its independent action cannot be so plainly exhibited . But when its motor centres have been taught , when they have gained by education the power of executing what are ...
... feeling and volition commonly mingle largely in its functions , and its independent action cannot be so plainly exhibited . But when its motor centres have been taught , when they have gained by education the power of executing what are ...
Seite 18
... feeling of the ideas is emotion - for I hold emotion to mean the special sensibility of the vesicular neurine to ideas ; —the registration of them is memory ; and the reaction to them is volition . Attention is the maintenance of the ...
... feeling of the ideas is emotion - for I hold emotion to mean the special sensibility of the vesicular neurine to ideas ; —the registration of them is memory ; and the reaction to them is volition . Attention is the maintenance of the ...
Seite 21
... feelings of the original experience , much that seemed to have vanished from the mind for ever . In the deepest and most secret recesses of mind , there is nothing hidden from the individual self , or from others , which may not be thus ...
... feelings of the original experience , much that seemed to have vanished from the mind for ever . In the deepest and most secret recesses of mind , there is nothing hidden from the individual self , or from others , which may not be thus ...
Seite 28
... feeling , much of the variety of which is due to the action of the orbicular muscles with the system of elevating and depressing muscles . Animals cannot laugh , because , besides being incapable of ludicrous ideas , they do not possess ...
... feeling , much of the variety of which is due to the action of the orbicular muscles with the system of elevating and depressing muscles . Animals cannot laugh , because , besides being incapable of ludicrous ideas , they do not possess ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
activity animal appear Archbishop Archbishop of York Aristotle asylum atheism attacks become bodily body brain cause cell cerebral hemispheres certainly character chemical affinity chemical compound chemical decomposition chemical force colloidal complex conception consciousness convolutions convulsions definite degeneracy delusions disorder display effects energy epilepsy epileptic evolution exalted excited exhibit existence external fact feeling Goethe heat higher highest human ideas idiocy idiot individual inflammation inorganic inquiry insane neurosis instinct intelligence kind knowledge laws lecture less living matter mania manifest melancholia mental derangement mental functions mind mind-centres molecular molecules moral morbid motor centres movements muscles muscular nature nerve nerve-cell nerve-centres neuralgia neurine observation occur organic matter patient phenomena philosophy phthisis physical physiological produced reflex action relations scientific sensation senses sensibility sensory sexual sometimes spinal cord structure supreme centres symptoms takes place tension force thought tion tissue true unconscious vague vital action vital force volition
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 109 - On earth there is nothing great but man, In man there is nothing great but mind.
Seite 133 - It is true, that a little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism; but depth in philosophy bringeth men's minds about to religion. For while the mind of man looketh upon second causes scattered, it may sometimes rest in them, and go no further; but when it beholdeth the chain of them, confederate and linked together, it must needs fly to Providence and Deity.
Seite 150 - But it is manifest that Plato, in his opinion of ideas, as one that had a wit of elevation situate as upon a cliff, did descry that forms were the true object of knowledge...
Seite 53 - the thoughts of men are " widened with the process of the suns," but that there are recurring cycles of improvement and decay.
Seite 53 - Whence come the savage snarl, the destructive disposition, the obscene language, the wild howl, the offensive habits, displayed by some of the insane? Why should a human being deprived of his reason ever become so brutal in character as some do, unless he has the brute nature within him?
Seite 108 - As physicians, we cannot afford to lose sight of the physical aspects of mental states, if we would truly comprehend the nature of mental disease, and learn to treat it with success. The metaphysician may, for the purposes of speculation, separate mind from body, and evoke the laws of its operation out of the depths of selfin.] UNITY OF BODY AND MIND.
Seite 161 - The colloidal is, in fact, a dynamical state of matter, the crystalloidal being the statical condition. The colloid possesses Energia. It may be looked upon as the probable primary source of the force appearing in the phenomena of vitality.
Seite iii - IX. Responsibility in Mental Disease. By HENRY MAUDSLEY, MD, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians ; Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in University College, London. I vol., I2mo.
Seite 161 - For the mineral forms of silicic acid, deposited from water, such as flint, are...
Seite 143 - We carry with us the wonders we seek without us: there is all Africa and her prodigies in us; we are that bold and adventurous piece of Nature, which he that studies wisely learns in a compendium what others labour at in a divided piece and endless volume.