INDEX. 



701 



Respiration, effects of seusory stim- 

 uli upon, II. 376 



liestitutiou of functiou, I. 67 fl. 



Restoration of function, I. 67 It'. 



Retention in niemorj-, 658 ff. 



Retentiveness, organic, I. 659 fl". ; it 

 is uncliaugeuble, 663 fl:. 



Retinal image, II. 92 



Retinal sensibility, see vision, space, 

 identical points, third dimension^ 

 projection, etc. 



Revival in memory, I. 574 II., 654 



Reynolds, Mary, I. 381. 



RiBOT, Th., I. 375; on attention, 

 444, 446, 680, 683 



RiCHET, Ch., I. 638, 644-6-7 



RiEHL, A., II. 33 



Robertson, G. C, I. 461; II. 86 

 ^.--Romanes, G. J. II. 95, 133, 337-9, 

 -^ 349, 351, 355, 397 



Romantic and classic, II. 469 



Rosenthal, 79 



Ross, J., I. 56-7 



RoYCE, J., I. 374; II. 316-7 



ROYER-COLLARD, I. 609 



Rutherford, II. 170 



Sagacity, II. 331, 343 



Sameness, I. 273, 459, 480, II. 650 



SCHAEFER, W., I. 35, 53, 59, 63 



ScHiFF, M., I. 58, 78, 100 



SCHMID, I. 683 



Schmidt, H. D., II. 399-400 

 ' Schneider, G. H., on Habits, I. 

 112, 118-20; on perception of 

 motion, II. 173; on evolution of 

 movements, 380; on instincts, 

 387-8, 411, 418, 439 



Schopenhauer, II. 33, 273 



Schrader, I. 72 ff. 



Science, the genesis of, II. 665-9 



Sea-sickness, susceptibility to, an 

 accident, II. 627 



Seat of consciousness, I. 65; of Soul, 

 214; of sensations, no original, 

 II. 34 



Sciences, the natural, the factors of 

 their production, II. 633 ff.; a 

 Turkish cadi upon, 640; pos- 

 tulate things with unchangeable 

 properties, 656 



Sciences, the pure, they express re- 

 sults of comparison exclusively, 

 II. 641; classiticatiou-s, 646; logic, 

 647; mathematics, 653 



Secretiveness, II. 432 



Seguin, I. 48, 75 



Selection, a cardinal function of 

 consciousness, 284 ft'., 402. 594; 

 XL 584; of visual reality. II. 177 



ff., 237; of reality in general, 290, 

 294; of essential quality, 333, 37a 

 634 



Self, consciousness of. Chap. X; 

 not primary, I. 273; the empirical 

 self, I. "2.^1; its constituents, 292; 

 the material self, 292; the social 

 self, 293; the spiritual self, 296; 

 resolvable into feelings localized 

 in head, 800 If. ; consciousness of 

 personal identity, 330 If.; its al- 

 terations, 373 If. 



Self-feeling, I. 305 ff. 



Self-love, I. 317; the name for ac 

 tive impulses and emotions to- 

 wards certain objects ; we do not 

 love our bare principle of indi 

 viduality, 323 



Self-seeking, I. 307 ff. 



Selves, their rivalry, I. 309 ff. 



Semi-retlex acts, I. 13 



Sensation, does attention increase 

 its strength? I. 425; terminus of 

 thought, 471 



Chapter XVII; distinguished 



from perception, II. 1, 76; its cog 

 nitivc function, 3; pure seu.sation 

 an abstraction, 3; the terminus of 

 thought, 7 



Sensations, are not compounds, I. 

 158 ft'.; II. 2; their suppo.sed com- 

 bination by a higher principle. 



I. 687; II. 37-30; their iutlu- 

 euce on each other, II. 28-30; 

 their eccentric projection, 31 if., 

 195 ff.; their localization inside of 

 one another. 188 if. ; their relation 

 to reality, 299 ff. ; to emotions, 

 453; their fusion, see Miiid-strij^ 

 theory 



Sensationalism, I. 343; criticised 



by spiritualism, 687 

 ditto, II. 5: in the field of 



space-perception, criticised, 218 



ff. ; its diiHculties, 231-7; defended, 



237 ff., 517 

 Sergi, II. 34 



Serial increase, I. 490; II. 644 

 Series, II. 644-51, 659 fi'. 

 Seth. a.. II. 4 

 Sexual function, I. 23 

 Shadows, colored, II. 25 

 Shame. II. 435 

 Shoemaker, Dr., I. 273 

 Shyness, II. 430 

 Sight, its cortical centre, i. 41 ff., 



66 

 Sign-making, a differentia of man, 



II. 356 



Signs, local. II. 155 ff. 



