INDEX. 



697 



Imitation, II. 408 



Iin- vtality, I. 848-9 



luiv. !ses, nioibid, II, 542 ff. See 

 instincts 



Impulsiveuess of all cousciousness, 

 II. 526 flf. 



Inattention, I. 404, 455 flf. 



Increase, serial, I. 490 



ludeteriuiuisni, II. 569 flf. 



Jngersoll, U., II. 469 



Inheritance of acquired characters, 

 II. 367, 678 flf. 



Inhibition, I. 43. 67. 404; II. 126, 

 373; of instincts, 391, 394; of one 

 cortical process by another, 583 



Innervation, feeling of, II. 236, 493; 

 it is unnecessary, 494 flf.; no evi- 

 dence for it. 499, 518 



, collateral, see vicarious func- 

 tion 



Insane delusions, I. 375; II. 113 



Insistent ideas, II. 545 



Instinct, Chapter XXIV.; defined, 

 II. 381; is a retlex impulse, 385 

 flf.; is neither blind nor invari- 

 able, 389; contrary instincts in 

 same animal, 392; man has more 

 than other mammals, 393, 441; 

 their transitoriness, 398; special 

 instincts, 404-441; the origin of 

 instincts, 678 



' Integration ' of feelings, Spencer's 

 theory of, I. 151 flf. 



Intelligence, the test of its presence, 



I. 8; of lower brain-centres, 78 ff. 

 Intention to speak, I. 253 

 Interest, I. 140, 284 flf., 402-3, 482, 



515 flf., 572, 594; II. 312 flf., 344-5, 

 634 

 Intermediaries, the axiom of .skipped, 



II. 646 

 Introspection, 1. 185 



Inverted head, vision with, II. 213 



Jackson, Hughlings, I. 29, 64, 400; 



II. 125-6 

 Janet, J., I. 385 

 Janet, Paul, I. 625; II. 40-1 

 Janet, Pierre, 1.203 ff., 227, 384 flf., 



682; II. 456, 614 

 Jastrow, I. 88, 543, 545; II. 44, 



135, 180 

 Jevons, W. S., I. 406 

 Joints, their sensibility, II. 189 ff. 

 Judgments, existential, II. 290 

 Justice, II. 673 



Kandinsky, v., II. 70, 116 

 Kant, I. 274, 331, 344, 347; his 

 ' transcendental ' deduction of the 



categories. 360; his paralogisms, 

 362; criticised, 363-6; on time, 

 642; on symmetrical tigures, II. 

 150; on space, 273 ff'. ; on the real, 

 296; on synthetic judgments a 

 priori, 661, and their relation to 

 experience, 664 



Kinaesthetic feelings, II. 488 ff'., 493 



~ Kleptomania,' II. 425 



Knee-jerk, II. 380 



Knowing, I. 216 ff . ; psychology as- 

 sumes it, 218; not reducible to 

 any other relation, 219. 471, 688 



Knowledge, two kinds of, I. 221; of 

 Self not essential to, 274; the rela- 

 tivity of, II. 9 ff'. ; the genesis of, 

 630 ff. 



Knowledge-a6o«^, I. 221 



KoNiG, I. 542 



Kries, von, I. 96, 547; II. 253 



Krishaber, I. 377 



KussMAUL, A., I. 684 



Ladd, G. T., I., 687; II. 3, 311 



Lamarck, II. 678 



Landry, II. 490, 492 



Lange, a., I. 29, 284 



Lange, C, II. 443, 449, 455, 457, 

 460, 462 



Lange, K., II. Ill 



Lange, L., on reaction-time, mus- 

 cular and sensorial, I. 92 



Lange, N., on muscular element in 

 imagination, I. 444 



Language, us a human function, II. 

 356-8 



Laromigueire, I. 247 



Laughter, II. 480 



Lazarus, I. 624, 626; II. 84, 97, 

 369, 429 



Le Conte, Joseph, II. 228, 252, 

 265 



Leonie, M. Janet's trance-subject, 

 I. 201, 387 ff 



Levy, W. H., II. 204 



Lewes, on frog's sp. cord, I. 9, 78, 

 134; on thought as a sort of alge- 

 bra, 270; on ' preperception,' 439, 

 442; on muscular feeling, II. 199; 

 on begging in pup, 400; on lapsed 

 intelligence, 678 



Lewinski, II. 192 



LiBERATORE, II. 670 



Liebman, O. , on brain as a machine, 



I. 10; II. 34 

 LiEGEOis, J., II. 594, 606 

 Light, effects of, on movement, II 



379 

 Likeness, I. 528 

 Lindsay, T. L., II. 421 



