INDEX. 



695 



Fallacy, the Psychologist's, I. 196, 1 



278, 153; II. 281 

 Familiarity, sense of, see recognition 

 Fatalism, II. 574 



Fatigue, diminishes span of con- 

 sciousness, I. 640 

 Fear, instinct of, II. 396, 415; the 



symptoms of, 446; morbid, 460; 



origin of, 478 

 Fechner, I. 485-6, 533, 539 ff., 549, 



616, 645; II. 50, 70, 137 flE., 178, 



464 

 Feeling, synonym for consciousness 



in general in this book, I. 186; 



feelings of relation, 243 

 Felida X. , I. 380-4 

 Fere, Ch., II. 6S, 378 ff. 

 Ferrier, D.. I. 31. 46-7-8, 53, 57- 



8-9, 445; II. 503 

 Ferrier, Jas., I. 274, 475 

 Fiat, of the will, II. 501, 526, 561, 



564; 568. ^qq decision 

 FiCHTE, I. 365 

 FiCK, I. 150 

 FiSKE, J., II. 577 

 Fixed ideas. See insistent ideas 

 Flechsio's Pyramidenbahu, I. 87 

 Flint, R., II. 425 

 Flourens, p., I. 30 

 Force, supposed sense of, II. 518 

 Forgetting, I. 679 fl. ; II. 370-1. See 



amnesia 

 FouiLLEE, A., II. 500, 570 

 Francois- Franck, I. 70 

 Franklin, Mrs. C. L., II. 94 

 Franz, Dr., II. 63 

 Freedom, of the will, II. 569 ff. 

 'Fringe' of object, I. 258, 281-2, 



471-2, 478 

 Frog's nerve-centres, I. 14 

 Fusion of feelings unintelligible, 



I. 157-62; II. 2. See Mind-stuff 



theory 

 Fusion of impressions into one ob- 

 ject, I. 484, 502; II. 103, 183 



Galton, p., I. 254. 265. 685; on 

 mental imagery. II. 51-7; on gre- 

 gariousness, 430 



General propositions, what they in- 

 volve, II. 337 ff. See universal 

 conceptions 



Genesis of brain-structure, its two 

 modes, II. 624 



Genius, I. 423, 530; II. 110, 352, 

 360 



Gentleman, the mind of the, II. 370 



Geometry, II. 658 



Giddiness, see vertigo 



GiLMAN. B. I., I. 95 



Gley, E.,II. 514-5, 535 



GOLDSCHEIDER, II. 170, 192 ff., 200 



GoLTZ, I. 9, 31, 33, 34, 45, 46, 58, 



62, 67, 69, 70, 74, 77 

 Gorilla, II, 416 

 Graefe, a., II. 507, 510 

 Grashey, I. 640 

 Grassman, R., II. 654 

 Gregariousuess, II. 430 

 Green, T. H. , I. 247, 274, 366-8; II. 



4, 10, 11 

 Grief, II. 443, 480 

 Griesinger, W., II. 298 

 Grubelsucht, II. 284 

 Guinea-pigs, epileptic, etc., II. 682-7 

 Guislain, II. 546 

 GuRNEY, E., I. 209; II. 117, 130, 469, 



610 

 GuYAU, II. 414, 469 



Habit, Chapter IV: due to plasticity 

 of brain-matter, 1. 105; depends on 

 paths in nerve-centres, 107; origi- 

 nation of, 109-13; mechanism of 

 concatenated habits, 114-8; they 

 demand some sensation, 118; ethi- 

 cal and pedagogic maxims, 121-7; 

 is the ground of association, 566; 

 of memory, 655 



Habits may inhibit instincts, II. 394. 

 Habit accounts for one large part 

 of our knowledge, 632 



Hall, G. S., I. 96-7, 558, 614, 616; 

 II. 155, 247, 281, 423 



Hallucination, sensation a veridical, 

 II. 33; of lost limbs, 38, 105; of 

 emotional feeling, 459 



Hallucinations, II. 114 ff. ; hypna- 

 gogic, 124; the brain-process in, 

 122 ff.; hypnotic, 604 



Hamilton, W., I. 214, 215, 274, 406, 

 419, 569, 578, 682; II. 113 



Hammond, E , II. 673 



Haploscopic method, II. 226 



Harless, II. 497 



Hartley, I. 553, 561, 564, 600 



Hartmann, R. , II. 416 



Hasheesh-delirium, II. 121 



Hearing, its cortical centre, I. 53 



Heat, of mental work, I. 100 



Hecker, II. 480 



Hegel, 1. 163, 265, 366, 369, 666 



Heidenhain, I. 82 



Helmholtz, H., I. 285; on atten- 

 tion, 422, 437, 441; on discrimi- 

 nation, 504, 516-21; time as a 

 category, 627-8; after-images, 645, 

 648; on color-contrast, II. 17 ff.; on 

 sensation, 33; on cochlea, 170; on 

 convergence of eyes, 200; vision 



