Thinking, Feeling, Doing: An Introduction to Mental Science |
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... The work is a thoroughly scientific treatise on stars . The name of the author is sufficient guarantee of scholarly and accurate work . ” — Scientific American . 10. - The Basis of Social Relations . A Study in Ethnic Psychology . By ...
... The work is a thoroughly scientific treatise on stars . The name of the author is sufficient guarantee of scholarly and accurate work . ” — Scientific American . 10. - The Basis of Social Relations . A Study in Ethnic Psychology . By ...
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appears Aristotle attention average beat Binocular blind-spot blue brain called Changing Rings colour blind combined crossed disparity Dichromats discrimination and choice disks distance drum dynamometer effect electric error Esthesiometer experiments fact fatigue feeling figure finger fork G. P. Putnam's Sons Geissler tubes give glass grams green grey hand hear Herbart Hermann von Helmholtz idea illusion illustrated increased indicate intensity interval irregular least noticeable change least noticeable difference left eye letters light looking measure memory ment mental method middle Moon Illusion moved movement objects observation odour olfactometer orange paper person pitch placed plethysmograph point of regard produced psychology quinine rapid reaction reaction-time record seen sensations shades shown in Fig shows smell sound spark star steadily Steadiness stereoscope Suppose Symmetry tapping taste things thought threshold tion tone touch Trichromats tube vibrations vision weight words yellow
Popular passages
Page 181 - ... probably never in all their lives received one genuine colour-sensation. The modern religionists of the school of Overbeck are just like people who eat slate-pencil and chalk, and assure everybody that they are nicer and purer than strawberries and plums.
Page 5 - I have noticed in one of my formicaria a subterranean cemetery, where I have seen some ants burying their dead by placing earth above them. One ant was evidently much affected, and tried to exhume the bodies, but the united exertions of the yellow sextons were more than sufficient to neutralise the effort of the disconsolate mourner.