Journal of Abnormal Psychology and Social Psychology, Volumen16American Psychological Association, 1922 |
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Términos y frases comunes
ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY action activity analysis animal appear association associative neurones attitude behavior behavioristic canine tooth character complete conception conflict consciousness correlation cortical definite degree disposition dream elements emotional epilepsy essential excitation experience explain expression fact factors Faculty Psychology fear feeling Freudian function herd instincts human instincts hypnosis ideas important impulse individual influence inhibition innate intelligence interest interpretation Journal less Lloyd Morgan McDougall means mechanism mechanistic ment mental method mind motor movements muscles nature nervous system neurones normal object observation organism patient personality phenomena physiological pleasure possible present principle problem Professor psychiatry psycho psychoanalysis psychopathology question reactions reflex relation repression response result Scratch Reflex seems sense sensory shows sleep social psychology stammering stimulus suggestion symptoms synapses tendency theory thought tion traits uncon unconscious words writer's cramp
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Página 350 - Whenever the same movements of the features or body express the same emotions in several distinct races of man, we may infer with much probability that such expressions are \ true ones, — that is, are innate or instinctive
Página 350 - We may . . . infer that fear was expressed from an extremely remote period in almost the same manner as it now is by man; namely, by trembling, the erection of the hair, cold perspiration, pallor
Página 368 - My object is to show that certain movements were originally performed for a definite end, and that, under nearly the same circumstances, they are still pertinaceously performed through habit when not of the least use
Página 368 - (1) The principle of serviceable associated Habits; (2) The principle of Antithesis; (3) The principle of actions due to the constitution of the Nervous System.
Página 187 - While engaged in writing this paper I read on the editorial page of the New York Times, July 12, 1921, the following: "I, William Howard Taft, do solemnly swear that I will . . . faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon me as Chief Justice of the United States . . . and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to tener
Página 368 - There are no grounds, as far as I can discover, for believing that any muscle has been developed or even modified exclusively for the sake of expression.
Página 229 - the role the desire for recognition has played in the creation of social '' values. 4. The desire for response is a craving, not for the recognition^ of the public at large, but for the more intimate appreciation of
Página 176 - differ from the present one. They will have on the one hand to include selections from the rich material of poetry, myth, usage of language and on the other hand to treat more profoundly the relations of the dream to the neuroses and
Página 349 - As the sensation of disgust primarily arises in connection with the act of eating or tasting, it is natural that its expression should consist chiefly in movements round the mouth
Página 50 - as the individual minds; its threads and parts lie within these minds; but the parts in the several individual minds reciprocally imply and complement one another and together make up the system which consists wholly of them; and therefore