Contents 



6. THE NEW AND THE CLASSICAL CONCEPT OF 



THE INDIVIDUAL COMPARED! SUMMARY *Jl 



CHAPTER III PSYCHOLOGICAL INDIVIDUALITY 74 



I. THE SELF CONSIDERED AS A SYNTHESIS OF 



STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS 74 



2. THE SELF AS A PRODUCT OF THE FUNCTIONS 

 OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM PSYCHO- 

 PHYSIOLOGICAL PARALLELISM 77 



3. FACTS OF NORMAL PSYCHOLOGY AT ISSUE 



WITH THE THESIS OF PARALLELISM 78 



CHAPTER IV SUBCONSCIOUS PSYCHOLOGY ' 84 



I. CRYPTO-PSYCHISM 84 



2. CRYPTOMNESIA 88 



3. ALTERATIONS OF PERSONALITY 94 



CHAPTER V THE SO-CALLED SUPERNORMAL SUB- 

 CONSCIOUSNESS 95 



I. SUPERNORMAL PHYSIOLOGY IS CONDI- 

 TIONED BY SUPERNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY 95 



2. MENTO-MENTAL ACTION 95 



3. LUCIDITY 98 



4. SPIRITOID PHENOMENA IOO 



CHAPTER VI CLASSICAL THEORIES OF THE SUB- 

 CONSCIOUS I O2 



PHYSIOLOGICAL THEORIES 



I. THE THEORY OF AUTOMATISM IO2 



2. THE THEORY OF MORBIDITY IC7 



PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORIES 



3. PETITIONES PRINCIPII III 



4. ARTIFICIAL DISJUNCTIONS AND VERBAL 



EXPLANATIONS 113 



5. PROFESSOR JASTROW'S THEORY Il'J 



6. M. RIBOT'S THEORY 118 



xxiii 



