692 



INDEX. 



action-time, 427-34; accompa- 

 nied by feelings of tension due to 

 adaptation of sense-organs, 434-8; 

 involves imagination or preper- 

 ception of object, 438-44; con- 

 ceivable as a mere eifect, 448 fl'. 



AuBERT, H., II. 235 



' Ausfallsei'scheinungen,' I. 75 



Auditory centre in brain, I. 52-6 



Auditory type of imagination, II. 

 60 



Automatic writing, I. 393 ff. 



Austen, Jane, I. 571 



Automaton-Theory, Chapter V: 

 postulated rather than proved, I. 

 134-8; reasons against it, 138-144; 

 applied to attention, 448 



disregarded in this book, II. 



583 



AzAM, Dr., I. 380. 



Babe and candle, scheme of, I. 25 

 Baby's tirst perception, II. 8, 34; his 



early instinctive movements, 404 



ff. 

 Baer, von, I. 639 

 Bagehot, W., I. 582; II, 383. 308 

 Bain, on series conscious of itself, 



I. 162; on self-esteem, 313; on 

 self-love, 328, 354; on attention, 

 444; on association, 485, 530, 561, 

 589, 601, 653; II. 6, 12, 69, 186, 

 271, 282, 296, 319, 322, 372-3, 463, 

 466, 551, 554-5 



Ballard, I. 266 



Balzac, I 374 



Bartels, I. 432 



Bastian, H. C II. 488 



Baumann, II. 409 



Baxt, I. 648 



Beaunis, E., II. 493 



Bechterew^, I. 407 



Belief. Chapter XXI: in sensations, 



II. 299 fl".; in objects of emotion, 

 306 ff.; in theories, 311 ff.; and 

 will, 319. See reality 



Bell, C, II, 483, 492 



Bergson, J., II. 609 



Berkeley, I, 254, 469, 476; II. 43, 



49, 77, 212, 240,666 

 Bernhardt, II. 502 

 Bernheim, I. 206 

 Bertrand, A,, II. 518 

 Bessel, I. 413 

 BiNET, A,, I. 203 ff.; II. 71, 74, 128 



ft".. 130, 167, 491, 520 

 Black, R. W., II. 839 

 Bleek, II. 358 

 Blind, the, their space-perception, 



II. 202 ff. ; after restoration to 



I sight, 211-2; hallucination of a 

 blind man, 323; dreams of the, 

 44 



Blindness, mental, I. 41, 50, 66. See 

 jStght, Hemiopia, etc. 



Blix, II. 170 



Bloch, II. 515 



Blood, its exciting effect on the 

 nerves, II. 412-o" 



Blood, B. P., II. 284 



Blood-supply to brain, I. 97 



Bourne, A., I. 391 



BouRRU, Dr., I. 388 



Bowditch, H. p., his reaction- 

 timer, 1. 87; on contra.st ip seea 

 motion, II. 247; on knee-jerk, 

 380; comparison of touch and 

 sight, 520 



Bowen, F., 214 



Bowne, B. p., on knowledge, I. 31^ 



Bradley, F. H., I. 452, 474, 604; 

 II. 7, 9, 284, 648 



Brain, its functions. Chapter II: of 

 frog, I. 14; of dog, 33; of monkey, 

 34; of man, 36; lower centres 

 compared with hemispheres, 9-10, 

 75; circulation in, 97; instability, 

 139; its connection with Mind, 

 176; 'entire' brain not a real 

 physical fact, 176; its changes as 

 subtle as those of thought, 234; 

 its dying vibrations operative in 

 producing consciousness, 242 



Influence of environment upon 



it, 626 ff. 



Brain-process, see neural process 



Brain-structure, the two modes of 

 its genesis, II. 624 



Brentano, I. 187, 547 



Bridgeman, Laura, II. 63, 358, 

 420 



Broca's convolution, I. 39, 54 



Brodhun, I. 542 



Brown, Thos., I. 348, 277, 371; II. 

 271 



Brown-Sequard, I. 43, 67, 69; II 

 695 



Brutes, the intellect of, II. 348 ff. 



Bucke, R. M., II. 460 



BuBNOPP, I. 82 



Burke, II. 464. 



Burnham, W. H., I. 689 



Burot, Dr., I. 388 



Caird, E., I. 366, 469, 471 H. ff- 

 Calmeil, a., II. 524 

 Campanella, II. 464 

 Campbell, G., I. 361 

 Cardaillac, I. 347 

 Carlyle, T., I. 311 



