William James: A Selection from His Writings on PsychologyPenguin Books, 1954 - 248 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 97
... words or of things ? Hardly anything ! Linger , and the words and things come into the mind ; the anticipatory intention , the divination is there no more . But as the words that replace it arrive , it welcomes them successively and ...
... words or of things ? Hardly anything ! Linger , and the words and things come into the mind ; the anticipatory intention , the divination is there no more . But as the words that replace it arrive , it welcomes them successively and ...
Página 119
... words preceding the ages . The word ages at its moment of strongest activity would , per se , indifferently discharge into either ' in ' or ' one ' . So would the previous words ( whose tension is momentarily much less strong than that ...
... words preceding the ages . The word ages at its moment of strongest activity would , per se , indifferently discharge into either ' in ' or ' one ' . So would the previous words ( whose tension is momentarily much less strong than that ...
Página 120
... words of the poem would be suddenly interrupted at the word ' heir ' . His emotional interest in that word would be such that its own special associations would prevail over the combined ones of the other words . He would , as we say ...
... words of the poem would be suddenly interrupted at the word ' heir ' . His emotional interest in that word would be such that its own special associations would prevail over the combined ones of the other words . He would , as we say ...
Términos y frases comunes
absolutely abstract action activity æsthetic association attention awaken become believe better brain brain-processes called chapter character conceiving consciousness course discharge effect effort emotional evil exciting existence fact feeling fiat Gifford lectures give habit healthy-mindedness Hegel Henry James Hugo Münsterberg human hypochondria hypothesis ideal ideas images immediately impulse instinctive intellectual interest James family James's Josiah Royce lectures logical matter means mediumship memory mental mind monistic moral movement mystical nature never nitrous oxide object once one's ourselves over-beliefs paths Perry phenomena philosophical physiological possible present Principles Principles of Psychology psychology question reader reason relations religion Royce saints scientific sciousness seems sensations sense simple sort spiritual T. H. Huxley tendency theory things thought tion Tom Ward total recall truth universe volition voluntary whilst whole William James words writing wrote