When we recall the impression of a word or sentence, if we do not speak it out, we feel the twitter of the organs just about to come to that point. The articulating parts — the larynx, the tongue, the lips — are all sensibly excited; a suppressed... The Senses and the Intellect - Side 341af Alexander Bain - 1874 - 714 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
 | James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch - 1856 - 800 sider
...could be furnished than the vocal recollections. When we recaí the impression of a word or a sentence, if we do not speak it out, we feel the twitter of...suppressed articulation is in fact the material of oar recollection, the intellectual manifestation, the idea of speech. Some persons of weak or incontinent... | |
 | 1868 - 1192 sider
...one stated by Professor Bain and others, that words are necessarily " motor processes/'1 and that " a suppressed articulation is, in fact, the material...intellectual manifestation, the idea of speech."* Having gone into the evidence bearing upon this question elsewhere,3 I will not now recapitulate; and... | |
 | 1869 - 588 sider
...the one stated by Professor Bain and others, that words are necessarily " motor processes,"1 and that "a suppressed articulation is, in fact, the material...recollection, the intellectual manifestation, the idea of speech."8 Having gone into the evidence bearing upon this question elsewhere,8 I will not now recapitulate;... | |
 | John Hughlings Jackson - 1873 - 108 sider
...indeed, he has applied to speech. ' When we recall/ he says ' the impression of a word or a sentence, if we do not speak it out, we feel the twitter of the organs just about to come to that point. The articulatory parts — the larynx, the tongue, the lips — are all sensibly excited ; a suppressed... | |
 | H. Charlton Bastian - 1880 - 730 sider
...speak, therefore, of the ' ideas ' of Words as ' motor processes,' or to say that, " a stq>pressed articulation is, in fact, the material of our recollection,...the intellectual manifestation, the idea of Speech," is, in the writer's opinion, both misleading and erroneous — though the latter is a view which has... | |
 | William James - 1890 - 726 sider
...sentence, if we do not speak it out, we feel the twitter of the organs just about to come to that po'.nt. The articulating parts — the larynx, the tongue,...intellectual manifestation, the idea of speech."* The open mouth in Strieker's experiment not only prevents actual articulation of the labials, but our... | |
 | William James - 1908 - 722 sider
...feelings in lips, tongue, throat, larynx, etc. " When we recall the impression of a word or sentence, if we do not speak it out, we feel the twitter of the organs just about to come to that po;nt. The articulating parts— the larynx, the tongue, the lipsare all sensibly excited ; a suppressed... | |
 | William James - 1892 - 510 sider
...verbal imagination is on •actual feelings in lips, tongue, throat, larynx, etc. Prof. Bain says that " a suppressed articulation is in fact the material...the intellectual manifestation, the idea of speech." In persons whose auditory imagination is weak, the articulatory image does indeed seem to constitute... | |
 | James Mark Baldwin, James McKeen Cattell, Howard Crosby Warren, John Broadus Watson, Herbert Sidney Langfeld, Carroll Cornelius Pratt, Theodore Mead Newcomb - 1913 - 542 sider
...and especially the help that inner speech affords our memory. "A suppressed articulation," he says, "is in fact the material of our recollection, the intellectual manifestation, the idea of speech." And Ribot2 too, even before Bain, had 1 Bain, 'The Senses and the Intellect,' 1868, p. 336. * Ribot,... | |
 | George Frederick Stout - 1899 - 686 sider
...could be furnished than the vocal recollections. When we recall the impression of a word or a sentence, if we do not speak it out, we feel the twitter of...the tongue, the lips— are all sensibly excited. . . . Some persons of weak or incontinent nerves can hardly think without muttering — they talk to... | |
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