The Senses and the IntellectJ. W. Parker, 1855 - 614 sider |
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Side v
... recognising the so - called muscular sense as distinct from the five senses , I have thought proper to assign to Move- ment and the feelings of Movement a position pre- ceding the Sensations of the senses ; and have endeavoured to prove ...
... recognising the so - called muscular sense as distinct from the five senses , I have thought proper to assign to Move- ment and the feelings of Movement a position pre- ceding the Sensations of the senses ; and have endeavoured to prove ...
Side 6
... recognised . In the division of mind into Understanding and Will , the element of Emotion would appear to be left out entirely . We shall find in fact , however , that the feelings are implied in , or placed under , the head of the Will ...
... recognised . In the division of mind into Understanding and Will , the element of Emotion would appear to be left out entirely . We shall find in fact , however , that the feelings are implied in , or placed under , the head of the Will ...
Side 7
... recognised as of an active or volitional nature he classes as a part of Emotion . Sir William Hamilton , in remarking on the arrangement followed in the writings of Professor Dugald Stewart , states his own view as follows : - ' If we ...
... recognised as of an active or volitional nature he classes as a part of Emotion . Sir William Hamilton , in remarking on the arrangement followed in the writings of Professor Dugald Stewart , states his own view as follows : - ' If we ...
Side 40
... recognise lines of conduction or transmission not only between the remote organs of the body and the cerebro - spinal centre , but also throughout the different parts of the encephalon and spinal cord ; in other words , we must admit ...
... recognise lines of conduction or transmission not only between the remote organs of the body and the cerebro - spinal centre , but also throughout the different parts of the encephalon and spinal cord ; in other words , we must admit ...
Side 49
... recognise this mode of mechanism in this its simplest example , as we shall have reason for believing that the same mode prevails extensively throughout the bodily and mental constitution . * There are certain special movements ...
... recognise this mode of mechanism in this its simplest example , as we shall have reason for believing that the same mode prevails extensively throughout the bodily and mental constitution . * There are certain special movements ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
acquire action activity acute adhesiveness alimentary animal appearance arising association bodily body brain cause cerebellum cerebral cerebral hemispheres Cerebral Nerves cerebrum character ciliary processes circumstances colour combination connected connexion consciousness contraction corpora quadrigemina degree discrimination distance distinct effect emotion energy example excitement exertion experience expression external extremities fact feeling force functions give glottis grey matter hemispheres human impression influence intellectual intense irritation kind limbs lungs mass medulla oblongata membrane mental ments mind mode motion mouth move movements muscles muscular namely nature nerve centres nerve fibres object odours operation optic optic nerve organs original pain papillæ pass peculiar pleasure portion present produced recognise recollection reflex remark retina reviving seen sensation sensations of sight sense sensibility sight similarity skin smell sound spinal cord spinal nerves spontaneous stimulus surface taste tension thalami things tion tissue tongue touch various volition voluntary white matter
Populære passager
Side 581 - ... and tumblings of the big blue German Ocean. Seaward St. Abb's Head, of whinstone, bounds your horizon to the east, not very far off; west, close by, is the deep bay, and fishy little village of Belhaven : the gloomy Bass and other rock-islets, and farther the Hills of Fife, and foreshadows of the Highlands, are visible as you look seaward. From the bottom of Belhaven bay to that of the next seabight St. Abb's-ward, the Town and its environs form a peninsula. Along the base of which peninsula,...
Side 581 - THE small Town of Dunbar stands, high and windy, looking down over its herring-boats, over its grim old Castle now much honeycombed, — on one of those projecting rock-promontories with which that shore of the Frith of Forth is niched and vandyked, as far as the eye can reach.
Side 612 - Writings of the Apostle Paul. By the same Author. Cheaper Edition. 8s. Essays on Errors of Romanism. By the same. Cheaper Edition. 7s, 6d. Essays on Dangers to Christian Faith from the Teaching or the Conduct of its Professors.
Side 370 - Why this celestial vault appears more distant towards the horizon, than towards the zenith, will afterwards appear. 3. The colours of objects, according as they are more distant, become more faint and languid, and are tinged more with the azure of the intervening atmosphere : to this we may add, that their minute parts become more indistinct, and their outline less accurately defined.
Side 496 - ... if advanced, it would find easy and sincere credence, when we recollect how many similar delusions have obtained vogue in modern times far more favourable to historical accuracy — how much false colouring has been attached by the political feeling of recent days to matters of ancient history, such as the Saxon Wittenagemote, the Great Charter, the rise and growth of the English House of Commons, or even the Poor-law of Elizabeth.
Side 614 - MA 4s. 6d. Homeric Ballads : the Text, with Metrical Translations and Notes. By the late Dr. MAGINN. 6s. Tacitus, the Complete Works, with a Commentary, Life of Tacitus, Indices, and Notes. Edited by Professor RITTEE, of Bonn. Four Volumes. Octavo. 28s. Aristophanis Comoedise Vndecim, cum Notis et Indice Historico, edidit HA HOLDER, AM Coll. Trin. Cant. Socius. 15s. Plays separately, Is.
Side 605 - Varronianus. A Critical and Historical Introduction to the Ethnography of Ancient Italy, and to the Philological Study of the Latin Language. By the late JW DONALDSON, DD Third Edition, revised and considerably enlarged. 8vo. 16*.
Side 519 - Persuasion implies that some course of conduct shall be so described, or expressed, as to coincide, or be identified, with the active impulses of the individuals addressed, and thereby command their adoption of it by the force of their own natural dispositions.
Side v - ALEXANDER BAIN'S WORKS. THE SENSES AND THE INTELLECT. By ALEXANDER BAIN. LL. D., Professor of Logic in the University of Aberdeen. 8vo. Cloth, $5.00. The object of this treatise Is to give a full and systematic account of two principal divisions of the science of mind— the senses and the intellect.
Side 163 - It is thickest in the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, where the skin is much exposed to pressure, and it is not Fig.