700 



Ii\DEX. 



ff. : memory depends oa them, 

 655 ff., 661, 686 

 Paulhan, F., I. 350; 408; 670; II. 

 64; 476 



Pedagogic remarks: I. 121-7; II. 

 110, 401-2, 409, 463, 466 



Perception. Ciiapter XIX; com- 

 pared with .sen.sation, II. 1, 76; 

 involves reproductive processes, 

 78; is of probable objects, 82 fi.; 

 not an unconscious inference, 111 

 If. ; rapidity of, 131 



Perception-time, II 131 



Perkz, B , I. 446; II. 416 



Personal equation, I. 413 



Personality, alterations of. I. 378 ff. 



Pplugeh, on f rog s spinal cord, I. 

 9, 134 



Philosophies, their test, II. 313 



Phosphorus and thought, 1. 101 



Phrenology, I. '27 



Pick, E., I. 669 



PiTKES, I. 206 



Planchette-writing, I. 308-9; 393 



ff. 

 Plyslicity, as basis of habit, defined, 



I. lO.j 

 Platner, II. 308 

 Plato, I. 463 

 Play, II. 427 



Pleasure, as related to will, I. 143; 



II. 549: 583-4 



Points, identical, theory of, II. 233 



ff. 

 Pos.ses.sion, Spirit-, I. 393 ff. 

 Post-hypnotic suggestion, II. 613 

 Practical interests, their effects on 



discrimination, I. 515 ff. 

 Prayer, 1. 316 

 ' Preperception,' I. 439 

 Present, the present moment, I. 606 



ff. 

 Preyer, II. 403 

 Probability determines what object 



shall be perceived, II. 82, 104, 



258, 260-3 

 Problematic conceptions, I. 463 

 Problems, the process of solution 



of, 1. 584 

 Projection of sensations, eccentric, 



II. 31 ff. 

 Projection, theory of, 11. 338 

 Psychologist's fallacy, the, see Fal- 



lacy 

 Psycho-physic law, I. 539 

 Pugnacitv. II 409 

 Pure Ego", I. 342 

 Putnam, J. J., I. 61 



Questioning mania, II. 384 



Rabier, I. 470, 604 



Rational propositions, II. 644 



Rationality is based ou apprehension 

 of serie.s, II. 659 



Rationality, postulates of, 670, 677 



Rationality, sense of, I. 260-4; II. 

 647 



Reaction-time, I. 87; simple, 88; 

 what it measures is not conscious 

 thought, 90; Lange's distinct icu 

 between muscular and .sensorial, 

 92; its variations, 94-7; intlueuced 

 by expectant attention, 437 ff'. ; 

 after intellectual process, 43".i; after 

 discrimination, 523; after associa- 

 tion, 557; after perception, II. 131 



Real size and shape of visual ob- 

 jects, II. 179, 237 ff'. 



Reality, the Perception of, Chapter 

 XXI; not a distinct content of 

 consciousness, 286; various orders 

 of, 287 ff'. ; every object has mme 

 kind of reality, 291 ff'. ; the choice 

 of, 290; practical. 393 ff.; means 

 relation to the self, 395-8; relation 

 of sensations to, 299; of emotions, 

 306 



Reason, I. 551. See Logic 



Reasoning, Chapter XXII; its defi- 

 nition, II. 325; involves the pick- 

 ing out of es-sences, or sagacity, 

 329. and abstraction, 332; ila 

 utility depends on the peculiar 

 constitution of this world, 337 ff., 

 651; depends on association by 

 similarity, 345 



Recall, I. 578, 654 



•Recepts.' II. 327, 349, 351 



Recognition, 673 



Recollection, voluntary. 585 ff. 



Redintegration, I, 569 



'Reductives,'II 125, 291 



Reflex acts, I. 12-, reaction-time 

 measures one, 90; concatenated 

 habits are con.stituted by a chain 

 of, 116 



Reid, Thomas, I. 609, 78; II. 214 

 216, 218, 240, 309 



Relating principle, I. 687-8 



Relation, feelings of, I. 243 ff. 

 space relations, II. 148 ff. 



Relations, inward, between ideas, II. 

 639, 643, 661, 671; the principle of. 

 transferred, 646 



Relief. II. 254-7-. See third dimen- 

 sion. 



Renouvier, Ch., I. 551; II. 309 



Reproduction in memory, I. 574 ff., 

 654; voluntary, 585 ff. 



Resemblance, I. 528 



