The Emotions and the Will

Voorkant
Cosimo, Inc., 1 nov 2006 - 640 pagina's
Bridging the first forays into human psychology with our modern perception of the discipline, Alexander Bain's writings are profoundly importantly texts in appreciating how we've come to understand the vast complexity of the human mind. First published in 1859, this is a replica of the completely revised 1888 third edition of Bain's classic work on human emotion, approaching the experience from a philosophical rather than a physiological standpoint. Here is the beginning of contemporary psychology: . the physical manifestations of human feeling . the evolution of the human brain and mind . how tender emotion enhances sociability . anger, power, and fear and their uses . the aesthetic emotions, from beauty to humor . how conflicting motives produce conflict . the difference between belief and knowledge . and much, much more. Scottish philosopher and psychologist ALEXANDER BAIN (1818-1903) was the chair of logic and English at the University of Aberdeen from 1860 to 1880. He also wrote The Senses and the Intellect (1855), Mental and Moral Science (1868), and Education as a Science (1879).
 

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Inhoudsopgave

There can be no abstract Moral Standard
270
The usual objections to Utility are sentimental
277
Process of enactment of moral rules
282
The selfformed or Independent Conscience
288
THE WILL
296
CHAPTER I
303
Natural Vigour Excitement Mental Stimulants
310
CHAPTER II
321

CHAPTER XIV
17
Domestication of the Animal Tribes
19
The Emotions affect the judgment of true and false
21
Expression
27
Human Power the literal sublime
28
Fixing a standard from known individuals
33
Value of mental analysis in reducing the difficulties
41
ΕΜΟΤΙΟN OF POWER
45
EVOLUTION AS APPLIED TO MIND
47
Facts from the domestication of animals
53
Feelings tested by conduct
58
The strongest example is the case of Living Beings
59
The Sexual Appetite
64
Physical side of Emotion as such
70
Specially prominent are Love and Anger
76
POWER and IMPOTENCE
79
CHAPTER V
89
The Emotional Temperament
95
Suggestion of the accompani
101
SYMPATHY
111
Next experience of the Signs
113
Fellowfeeling supposes a regard to our own happiness
119
Transformations of the embrace
134
Sensuous aspects of infancy The Maternal feeling
141
Social and Ethical bearings of Tenderness
147
of power
156
Servile Terror
162
Reaction from Terror Comfort of Security
168
Expression described
174
PAGE
178
Peculiarities that circumscribe the ęsthetic pleasures
189
PHYSICAL SIDEcontains no original manifestation
197
Selfpity an appropriation of the luxury of Pity
204
CHAPTER XII
215
PAGE
222
Designations of the ęsthetic qualities
228
Unity in Varietymusical form
234
Expressiveness of Form and Outline
241
The Sublime Complex aspects of Power
247
Sublime of Support
249
The Imitative Fine Arts Conditions of artistic imita
255
CHAPTER XV
264
Mastication
328
Avoiding painful and courting pleasurable Sounds
334
CHAPTER III
340
Imitation of Movements at sight
348
Operation of Pleasure and Pain in idea
354
The operation of the Will limited to muscles
359
Control of feeling tests power of Will
366
Control of the intellectual trains a test of volitional
374
CHAPTER V
383
Conflict of the Actual with the Ideal
403
Example
410
Deliberation no exception to the theory of the Will
416
sexual
434
CHAPTER IX
440
Culture applied to special emotions
448
Spontaneity modified by habit
454
CHAPTER X
460
DUTY Selfpromptings
466
The Independent Conscience
472
CHAPTER XI
479
Question of Liberty not wholly verbal The invariable
485
Self the sumtotal of the classified mental functions
491
Repression of DesireContentment
497
Determinism has no connection with the Utilitarian
498
Belief not identical with knowledge or with emotion
505
Order of handling of the questions raised
511
Experience discriminates the precise conditions of
515
Emotion or Feeling heightens the intensity of an idea
522
Belief in the Supernatural
529
Mr Sullys views as to the foundations of Belief
535
I Mental
545
The common groundwork of Emotion and of Intellect 570
549
Excitement attending Pain 391
553
Sense of Agreement
555
Perception more intellectual than Sensation
561
EFFORT Various feelings associated with voluntary
564
All sensation does not become knowledge
569
The three features formerly given as distinguishing
575
The Ontological problem of the Reality of an Inde
583
A On the most general physical conditions of Consciousness
589
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