702 



IXDEX. 



BiG-SVART, C, II. 634-6 



filKORSKY, II. 465 



Similarity, I. 528 



Gimilarity, association by, I. 578; 

 II. 345, 353 



Skill, discrimination of points on, 

 I. 512 



Sleep, partial consciousness during, 

 I. 213 



Sociability, II. 430 



Somuaiiibulism, see Jiypnotmn, 

 liyaterics 



Soul, tbeory of the, I. 180; inac- 

 cessibility of, 187; its essence is 

 to think (according to Descartes), 

 200; seat of, 214; arguments for 

 its existence. 343 ff. ; an iinueces- 

 sarj- hypothesis for psychology, 

 350; compared with transcenden- 

 tal Ego, 365; a relating principle, 

 499 



Space, the perception of. Chapter 

 XX; primitive extensity in three 

 dimensions, II. 134-9: spatial 

 order, 145; space-relaiions, 148; 

 localization in, 153 li. ; how real 

 Apace is mentally constructed, 166 

 Sl.\ part plaj-ed by movement in, 

 171-6; measurement of exten- 

 sions, 177 If.; .synthesis of origi- 

 nally chaotic sensations of exten- 

 sion, 181 fl ; part played by 

 articular surfaces in, 189 ff.; by 

 muscles, 197 ff. ; how the blind 

 uerceive space, 203 ff.; visual 

 ipace, 211-268; theory of identical 

 l^oints. 222; of projection, 228; 

 difficulties of sensation-theory 

 expounded and replied to, 231- 

 268; historical sketch of opinion, 

 270 ff. 



Spalding, D. A., II. 396, 898, 400, 

 406 



Span of consciousness, I. 405, 640 



Bpeech, the ' centre ' of, I. 55; its 

 misleading influence in psychol- 

 ogj', I. 194; thought po.ssible 

 without it, 269. See Aphasia, 

 Plirenology 



Spexcer, his formula of ' adjust- 

 ment,' I 6; on formation of paths 

 in nerve-centres, 109; on chasm 

 between mind and matter, 147; on 

 origin of consciousness, 148; on 

 'integration' of nervous shocks, 

 151-3; on feelings of relation, 247; 

 on unity of self, 354: on con- 

 ceivability, 464; on abstraction, 

 506; on association, 600; on time- 

 perception, 622, 639; on memory, 



649; on recognition, 673; on feel 

 iug and perception, II. 113. 180; 

 on space-perception, 272. 282; on 

 genesis of emotions, 47y ff.; on 

 free-will, 576; on inheritance of 

 acquired peculiarities, 620 ff., 679; 

 on ' equilibration, ' 627; on genesis 

 of cognition, 643; on that of so- 

 ciality and pity, 685 



Spinoza, II. 288 



Spir, a., II. 665, 677 



'Spirit-control,' I. 228 



Spiritualist theory of the self, I. 

 342; II. 5 



Spiritualists, I. 161 



Stanley, Henry M., II. 310 



Starr, A., I, 54. 56 



Statistical method in psychology, 

 I. 194 



Steiner, I. 72-3 



Steinthal, 1. 604; II. 107-9 



Stepanoff, II. 170 



Stereoscope, II. 87 



Stereoscopy, II. 223, 252. See third 

 dimension 



Sternberg, II. 105, 515 



Stevens, I. 617 



Stevens, E. W., I. 397 



Story, Je.\n, I. 263 



Stream of Thought, Chapter IX: 

 schematic representations of, I. 

 279-82 



Stkicker, S., II. 62 ff. 



Strumpell. a., I. 376, 445, 489, 

 491 



Strumpell, Prof , II. 853 



Stcart, D., I. 406. 427 



Stumpf. C, on attention, I. 426; 

 on difference, 493; on fusion of 

 impressions, 522, 530-3; on strong 

 and weak sensations, 547; on re- 

 lativit3' of knowledge, II. 11; on 

 sensations of extent, 219, 221 



Subjective sensations, I. 516 ff. 



Substance, spiritual, I. 345 



Substantive states of mind, I. 243 



Substitution of parts for wholes in 

 reasoning, II. 330; of the same 

 for the same, 650 



Subsumplion, the principle of medi 

 ate. II. 648 



Succession, not known by succes- 

 sive feelings, I. 628; vs. duration, 

 609 



Suggestion, in hypnotism, II. 598- 

 601; post-hvpnotic, 613 



Suicide, I. 317 



Sully, J.. 1. 191; II. 79. 231, 272, 

 281, 322, 425 



Summation of stimuli, I. 82; of el'? 



