ON ANTHROPOMETRIC INVESTIGATION IN THE BRITISH ISLES. 361 
11. Freedom and range of play of ‘ fancy’ (i.e., in popular speech— 
imaginativeness). 
12. Purposive constructive imagination (i.e., ‘inventiveness,’ or the 
power of bringing things together in imagination in relations in which 
they have not previously been experienced, under the guidance of the 
idea of some end to be achieved). 
13. Power of ‘logical inference’ or reasoning. 
14, Confidence in his own observations, judgments, and inferences. 
15. Freedom of expression of feelings and emotions. 
16. Liability to anger 
(a) Readiness with which the emotion is excited ; 
(b) Intensity of the emotion ; 
(c) Duration of the emotion. 
17. Fear. 
(a) 
(d) Same as 16. 
(c) 
18. Curiosity. 
(a) \ 
(d) Same as 16. 
(c) 
19. Joyousness. 
20. Sympathy (the tendency to be moved by an emotion when the 
expression of it in another person is witnessed—i.e., primitive sympathy). 
21. Courage or resolution (i.e, not mere absence of fear, but degree 
to which purpose is pursued in spite of pain, fear, opposition, and of 
difficulties foreseen). 
22. Altruism (the tendency to put the welfare of others, individuals 
or the public, before one’s own as a motive of action). 
23. Egoism (the frequency with which the idea of one’s self and its 
relations is the ruling motive in action and the mainspring of the 
emotions). 
24. Conscientiousness (tendency for action to be controlled by general 
principles rather than by the immediate promptings of desire and 
emotion ; expressed, ¢.g., in truthfulness, honesty in schoolwork, punc- 
tuality, and general trustworthiness). 
25. Industriousness. 
26. Sensitiveness to opinions of other individuals (e.g., of teachers or 
schoolfellows) or to public opinion (this is not to be confounded with 
conscientiousness or with suggestibility). 
27. Sociability (the finding of pleasure and satisfaction in the society 
of fellows). 
28. Initiative (expressed, e.g., in tendency to assume leadership in 
games, in class, We.). 
29. Masterfulness—the tendency to impose one’s own will and 
opinions upon others. 
30. Suggestibility—readiness with which opinions and beliefs are 
impressed by the expressions of other persons. 
