698 



INDEX. 



LiPPS, on ' unconscious ' sensations, 



I. 175; on theory of ideas, 603; 

 time-perception, 632; on muscular 

 feeling, II. 200; on distance, 221; 

 on visual illusions. 251, 264; on 

 space-perception, 280; on reality, 

 297; on effort, 575 



LiSSAUER, I. 50 



Local signs, II. 155 11., 167 



Localizatiou, in hemispheres, 1.30 fE. 



Localization, II. 153 tf. ; of one sen- 

 sible object in another; II. 31 11. , 

 183 11., 195 ff. 



Locke, J., I. 200, 230, 247, 349, 

 390, 462, 483, 553, 563, 679; II. 

 210, 306, 644, 662-4 



'Locksley Hall,'I. 567 



Locomotion, instinct of, II. 405 

 'LoEB, I. 33, 44; II. 255, 516, 628 



Logic, II. 647 



Lombard, J. S., I. 99 



Lombard, W., II. 380 



LoTZE, I. 214: on immortality, 349; 

 on personal identity, 350; on at- 

 tention, 442-3; on fusion and dis- 

 crimination of sensations, 522; 

 on local signs, II. 157, 495; on 

 volition, 523-4 



Louis v., I. 388 



Love, sexual, II. 437, 543; parental, 

 439; Bain's explanation of, 551 



Lowell, J. R., I. 582 



LuciANi, I. 44-5-6-7, 53, 60. 



McCosH, I. 501 



Mach, E., on attention, I. 436; on 

 space-feeling, 449; on time feel- 

 ing, 616. 635; on motion-contrast, 



II. 247; on optical inversion. 255; 

 on probability, 258; on feel.iug of 

 innervation, 1509, 511 



Magnitude of differences, I. 530 ff. 



Malebranche, II. 9 



Manouvrier, II. 496 



Mania, transitory, II. 460 



Man's intellectual distinction from 



l)rutes, II. 348 ff. 

 Mansel, H. L . I. 274 

 Mantegazza. p., II. 447, 479, 481 

 Marcus Aurelius, I. 313, 317; II. 



675 

 Marillier, L.. I. 445; II. 514 

 Marique, I. 65 

 Martin, H.N., 99; II. 3 

 Martineau, J., I. 484 ff., 506; II. 9 

 Maudsley, H., I. 113, 656 

 Maury, A., II. 83, 124, 127 

 Mechanical philosophy, the. II 



666 ff. 

 Mechanism vs. intelligence, I. 8-14 



Mediate comparison, I. 489 



Mediumship, I. 228, 893 ff. 



Mehner, I. 618 



Memorj', Chapter XVI : it depends 

 on material conditions, I. 2; the 

 essential function of the hemi- 

 spheres, 20; lapses of, 373 fl"., in 

 hysterics, 384 ff. ; favored by at- 

 tention, 427; primary, 638, 643; 

 analysis of the phenomenon of 

 Memory, 648; the return of a 

 mental image is not memory, 649; 

 memory's causes, 653 ff. ; the re- 

 sult of association, 654; conditions 

 of good memory, 659; brute re- 

 tentiveness, 660; multiple associa- 

 tions, 662; improvement of mem- 

 ory, 667 If. ; its usefulness depends 

 on forgetting much, 680; its decay, 

 683; metaphysical explanations of 

 it, 687 If. 



Mentality, the mark of its presence, 

 1.8 



Mental operations, simultaneous, I. 

 408 



Mercier, C, on inertness of con- 

 sciousness, 135; on inhibition, II. 

 583 



Merkel, I. 542-3-4 



Metaphysical principles, II. 689ff. 



Metaphysics, I. 137, 401 



Meyer's experiment on color-con- 

 trast, II. 21 



Meyer, G. H., II. 66, 97-8 



Meynert, T., his brain-scheme, I. 

 25, 64, 72 



Mill, James, I. 277, 355, 470, 476, 

 485, 499, 597, 651, 653 



II. 77 



Mill, J. S., I. 189; on unity of 

 self, 356-9; on abstract ideas, 470; 

 methods of inquiry, 590; on in- 

 finitude and association, 600; on 

 space, II. 271; on belief, 285, 322; 

 on reasoning, 331; on the order 

 of Nature, 634; on arithmetical 

 propositions, 654 



Mills, C. K., 1. 60 



Mimicry, its effects on emotion. II. 

 463-6 



Mind, depends on brain-conditions, 

 I. 4, 553 ; the mark of its pres- 

 ence, 8; difficulty of stating its 

 connection with brain, 176; 

 what psychology means by it, 

 183, 216 



Miud-Stufl: theory, Chapter VI: a 

 postulate of evolution, I. 146, 176; 

 some proofs of it. 148; aiUhor's 

 interpretation of thom, 154; IVeU 



