Proceedings of the American Psychological Association, Volume 1Macmillan, 1893 - 29 páginas |
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Página 9
... question as to the fundamental distinction between perception and conception , seeing and imagining . Our experiments also seek to determine : ( a ) the maximum rate of rotation for various distances at which no deceptions occur ; ( b ) ...
... question as to the fundamental distinction between perception and conception , seeing and imagining . Our experiments also seek to determine : ( a ) the maximum rate of rotation for various distances at which no deceptions occur ; ( b ) ...
Página 11
... questions should recognize the needs of philosophy in a higher degree . If psychology unites with physiology in ... questions to the higher psychological problems or it will degenerate into a superficial scholastic sport . Everything ...
... questions should recognize the needs of philosophy in a higher degree . If psychology unites with physiology in ... questions to the higher psychological problems or it will degenerate into a superficial scholastic sport . Everything ...
Página 12
... 27 and 28 , 1893 , was accepted . The question of holding a Psychological Congress in Chicago in Report of the Secretary and Treasurer , Professor Joseph Jastrow 12 Proceedings of the American Psychological Association .
... 27 and 28 , 1893 , was accepted . The question of holding a Psychological Congress in Chicago in Report of the Secretary and Treasurer , Professor Joseph Jastrow 12 Proceedings of the American Psychological Association .
Página 15
... questions we must take a posi- tion which recognizes the merits of a great variety of workmen , pursuing different ... question we must admit the historical fact that philosophy is on the whole much older and more interesting to the ...
... questions we must take a posi- tion which recognizes the merits of a great variety of workmen , pursuing different ... question we must admit the historical fact that philosophy is on the whole much older and more interesting to the ...
Página 16
... question the assumption upon which the natural sciences rest , —he must accept the external world , the world of matter and motion . He must also accept the existence of consciousnesses reflecting this world , and numerically distinct ...
... question the assumption upon which the natural sciences rest , —he must accept the external world , the world of matter and motion . He must also accept the existence of consciousnesses reflecting this world , and numerically distinct ...
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Termos e frases comuns
æsthetic amnésie angular gyrus animal intelligence animals arrivé autres avons belief Bewusstsein bien brain c'est calcarine fissure centre chromatismes Clark University Columbia College Congress consciousness cortex couleur d'autres d'une deren deux différents discussion elle Empfindung état être experiments F. W. H. MYERS fact fait feeling following paper gyrus hallucinations heures hypnotic idées images introspection j'ai jours können l'audition l'esprit l'état l'on lesion m'ont malade mémoire ment mental method motor movement muscular nombre normal object observation occipital occipital lobe ont été pain perception percipient persons peut phenomena phénomènes physiological PIERRE JANET prefrontal lobes première main PRESIDENT Prof Professor Baldwin Professor EBBINGHAUS Professor SULLY proportions psychical psychiques qu'elle qu'il question questionnaires rapport Reaction Reiz relation réponses résultats retina rien sensation sense sensibility sensory somnambulisme souvenirs stimulus Stufe suggestion sujet tactile temps theory tion tout University vision visual volition Wahrnehmung Weber's Law Young-Helmholtz theory Zahlen
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 44 - In no case may we interpret an action as the outcome of the exercise of a higher psychical faculty, if it can be interpreted as the outcome of the exercise of one which stands lower in the psychological scale
Página 56 - Have you ever, when believing yourself to be completely awake, had a vivid impression of seeing or being touched by a living being or an inanimate object, or of hearing a voice; which impression, so far as you could discover, was not due to any external physical cause...
Página 24 - ... the images were often curiously arbitrary and sometimes almost undecipherably symbolic. For example, it took him a long time to discover that an odd symbolic image which accompanied the word "value " was a faint, partial image of a man putting something in a scale.
Página 104 - ... only a part of its exciting substance at once ; three chemical constituents of the exciter of the greysensation can therefore now be present separately (under the influence of three different parts of the spectrum respectively) and they severally cause the sensation of red, green and blue. But when all three of these substances are present at once, they re-combine to produce the exciter of the grey sensation, and thus it happens that the objective mixing of three colors, in proper proportions,...
Página 21 - Further, he says that in the beginning man was born from animals of a different species. His reason is that, "while other animals quickly find food for themselves, man alone requires a prolonged period of suckling. Hence, had he been originally such as he is now, he could never have survived.
Página 18 - VOYELLES A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, 0 bleu, voyelles, Je dirai quelque jour vos naissances latentes.
Página 13 - Memorial shall, subject to the supervision and direction of the Secretary of War, be in charge of three commissioners, consisting of Army officers, civilians, or both, to be appointed by the Secretary of War, one of whom shall be designated as chairman and another as secretary of the commission.
Página 42 - ... disvulnerable — ie, better able to resist pain. Carle assured me women would let themselves be operated upon almost as though their flesh were an alien thing. Giordano told me that even the pains of childbirth caused relatively little suffering to women, in spite of their apprehensions. Dr. Martini, one of the most distinguished dentists of Turin, has informed me of the amazement he has felt at seeing women endure more easily and courageously than men every kind of dental operation. Mela, too,...
Página 9 - Note upon the Controversy regarding the Relation of the Intensity of the Stimulus to the Reaction-time.
Página 122 - In this connection it is interesting to notice that those parts of the cortex which, according to the current view, were to be associated with the defective sense organs, were also particularly thin. The cause of this thinness was found to be due, at least in part, to the small size of the nerve cells there present. Not only were the large and medium-sized nerve cells smaller, but the impression made on the observer was that they were also less numerous than in the normal cortex.