Great Books of the Western World, Band 51Robert Maynard Hutchins Encyclopædia Britannica, 1952 |
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Seite 151
... never have been sensibly learned ; it had to be inferred from a series of indirect considerations . There are facts which make us believe that our sensibility is altering all the time , so that the same object . cannot easily give us ...
... never have been sensibly learned ; it had to be inferred from a series of indirect considerations . There are facts which make us believe that our sensibility is altering all the time , so that the same object . cannot easily give us ...
Seite 331
... never complete , the analysis of a compound never perfect , because no element is ever given to us absolutely alone , and we can never therefore approach a compound with the image in our mind of any one of its components in a perfectly ...
... never complete , the analysis of a compound never perfect , because no element is ever given to us absolutely alone , and we can never therefore approach a compound with the image in our mind of any one of its components in a perfectly ...
Seite 807
... never wholly resolves , never gets its voice out of the minor into the major key , or its speech out of the subjunctive into the imperative mood , never breaks the spell , never takes the helm into its hands . In such characters as ...
... never wholly resolves , never gets its voice out of the minor into the major key , or its speech out of the subjunctive into the imperative mood , never breaks the spell , never takes the helm into its hands . In such characters as ...
Inhalt
THE FUNCTIONS OF THE BRAIN | 8 |
Reflex semireflex and voluntary acts The Frogs nervecentres General | 17 |
ON SOME GENERAL CONDITIONS OF BRAINACTIVITY | 53 |
Urheberrecht | |
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abstract æsthetic after-image animal aphasia appear association associationist attention awaken become believe blind brain brain-process called centres chap chapter color conceive conception consciousness contrast direction discrimination distinct emotion excited exist experience F. H. Bradley fact feeling felt fovea frog give habit hallucination hand Helmholtz hemispheres ideas identical imagination immediately impression impulse instinctive J. S. Mill less look matter means memory mental metaphysical mind motion motor movement muscular nature nervous never object observation occipital lobes optical organ peculiar perceive perception person phenomena Physiol physiological present psychic psychology reality reason redintegration reflex reflex action relations result retinal seems sensation sense sensible sensorial sight simple skin sort sound space specious present spinal cord spiritualistic stimulus successive suppose theory things thought tion visual Weber's law whilst whole words Wundt