INDEX. 



693 



Carpenter, W. B., on formation 

 of habits, I. 110; ethical remarks 

 on habit, 120 : mistakes in speech, 

 357 ; lapses of memory, 374; on 

 not feeling pain, 419; on ideo- 

 motor action, II. 522 



Carville, I. 69 



Catalepsy, I. 229; II. 583 



Cattell, ou reaction-time, I. 92, 

 432; 524; ou recognition, 407, 

 648; on attention, 420; on asso- 

 ciation-time, 558 If. 



■Cause, consciousness a, I. 137 ; II. 

 583, 592 



■Centres, cortical, I. 30 fE.; motor, 

 31; visual, 41 ; auditory, 52; olfac- 

 tory, 57; gustatory, 58; tactile, 58 



Cerebral process, see neural pro- 

 cess 



Cerebrum, see Brain, Hemispheres 



Chadbourne, P a., II. 383 



Characters, general, II. 329 If. 



Charcot, I. 54-5; II. 58, 596 



Chloroform, I. 531 



Choice, see selection, interest 



Circulation in brain, I. 97; effects 

 of sensory stimuli upon, II. 374 

 ff. ; in grief, 443-4 



Classic and romantic, II. 469 



Classitications, II. 646 



Clay, E. C. R., I. 609 



Cleanliness, II. 434 



Clearness, I. 426 



Clifford, I. 130-2 



Clouston, II. 114, 284-5, 537, 539 



CoBBE, F. P., I. 374 



Cochlea, theory of its action, II. 

 169 



Cognition, see knowing 



CoiiEN, H., I. 365 



Coleridge, S. T., I. 572, 681 



Collateral innervation, see vicarious 

 function 



Comparison, Chapter XIII: rela- 

 tions discovered by comparison 

 have nothing to do with the time 

 and space order of their terms, 

 II. 641; mediate, 489, 644; see 

 difference, likeness 



Composition, of Mind out of its 

 elements, see Mind-Stuff thevry; 

 differences due to, I. 491 



COMTE, A., I. 187 



Conceivability, I. 463 



Conceptions, Chapter XII: defined, 

 I. 461; — their permanence, 464 

 ff. ; do not develop of them- 

 selves, 466 fl".; abstract, 468; uni- 

 versal. 473; essentially teleologi- 

 cal. li. 332 



Conceptual order different from 

 perceptual, I. 482 



Concomitants, law of varying, I. 506 



Confusion, II. 352 



Consciousness, its seat, I. 65; its 

 distribution, 142-3; its function of 

 selection, 139-41; is personal in 

 form, 225; is continuous, 237, 

 488; of lack, 251; of self not 

 essential, 273; of object comes 

 first, 274; always partial and se- 

 lective, 284 ff., see Selection; of 

 the process of thinking, 300 ff. ; 

 the span of, 405 



Consent, in willing, II. 568 



Considerations, I. 20 



Constructiveness, II. 426 



Contiguity, association by, I. 561 



Continuity of object of conscious- 

 ness, I. 488 



Contrast, of colors, II. 13-27; of 

 temperatures, 14; two theories of, 

 17 ff., 245; of movements, 245 ff., 

 250 



Convolutions, motor, I. 41 



Cortex, of brain, experiments on, 

 I. 31 ff. 



Cramming, I. 663 



Credulity, our primitive, II. 319 



Cudworth, R., II. 9 



' Cue,' the mental, II. 497, 518 



Cumberland, S., II. 525 



Curiosity. II. 429 



CZERMAK, II. 170, 175 



Darwin, C, II. 432, 446, 479, 484, 



678, 681-2-4 

 Darwinism, scholastic refutation 



of, II. 670 

 Data, the, of psychology, I. 184 

 Davidson, T., I. 474" 

 Deaf-mute's thought in infancy, I. 



266 

 Deafness, mental, I. 50, 55-6. See 



hearing 

 Dean, S., I. 394 

 Decision, five types of, II. 531 

 Degenerations, descending in nerve- 

 centres, I. 37. 52 

 Deiabarre, E., II. 13-27, 71 

 Delbcexjp, J., 1. 455, 531, 541, 



542, 548-9; II. 100, 189, 249, 



264. 605. 609, 612 

 Deliberation, II. 528 ff. 

 Delusions, insane, 1. 375; II. 114 ff. 

 Depth, see tliird dimension 

 Descartes, I. 130, 200, 214, 344 

 Desttjtt de Tracy, I 247 

 Determinism must be postulated by 



psychology, II. 576 



