 | Elements, George Drysdale - 1861 - 622 sider
...parts, the first on the Senses and the Intellect, and the second on the Emotions and the Will), as the cravings produced by the recurring wants and necessities of our bodily or organic life. All of them have the same leading characteristics: they are powerful desires arising from deep-seated... | |
 | Arthur Young - 1873 - 222 sider
...Bcrii,e(l by the following property, viz., that they are the cravings produced seeking after , . , , by the recurring wants and necessities of our bodily or organic life . . sufficiently ... if we look at the craving alone without reference to the action intensified, for... | |
 | George Drysdale - 1876 - 804 sider
...parts, the first on the Senses and the Intellect, and the second on the Emotions and the Will), as the cravings produced by the recurring wants and necessities of our bodily or organic life. All of them have the same leading characteristics : they are powerful desires arising from deep-seated... | |
 | Chambers W. and R., ltd - 1875 - 840 sider
...other class. THE APPETITES. The appetites are a select class of our sensations and feelings, defined as the cravings produced by the recurring wants and necessities of our bodily or organic hfe. The taking in of nourishment, the ejection of what is formed to be thrown out, the supply of air,... | |
 | Elizabeth Kingsbury - 1882 - 144 sider
...Intellect,' says, 'The appetites commonly recognized are a select class of feeling, and are described by the following property, namely, that they are the cravings produced by the recurring wants of our bodily or organic life." Speaking of those organs more directly acted upon by the emotion of... | |
 | David Jayne Hill - 1888 - 770 sider
...connection. Appetite must not be identified with feeling as a mere incentive to action. Bain says: "If a spur to action were to constitute appetite,...and necessities of our bodily, or organic, life." * 2. Natural Appetites. The following are the most definitely marked natural appetites : (1) Hunger.... | |
 | David Jayne Hill - 1888 - 456 sider
...connection. Appetite must not be identified with feeling as a mere incentive to action. Bain says: "If a spur to action were to constitute appetite,...the appetites commonly considered are a select class ot feelings, and are circumscribed by the following property — namely, that they are the cravings... | |
 | James Sawyer - 1904 - 74 sider
...sleep is an appetite. We may define an appetite, in the words of the philosopher Bain, to be a craving produced by the recurring wants and necessities of our bodily or organic life.* An appetite, strictly so-called, has two characteristic marks, and these marks are strikingly characteristic... | |
 | 1907 - 636 sider
...like all our other effective forms of the Will, a combination of instinct and education. These senses are the cravings produced by the recurring wants and necessities of our bodily organic life. The fact of periodic recurrence is in no case more strikingly exemplified than in sleep.... | |
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