INDEX. 



703 



ments of feeling, 151; the latter 

 is inadmissible, 158 



Superposition, in space-measure- 

 ments, II. 177, 266 If 



Symbols as substitutes for reality, 

 II. 305 



Sympathy, II. 410 



Synthetic judgments a priori, II. 

 ■^661-3 



Systems, philosophic, sentimental, 

 and mechanical, II. 665-7 



Tactile centre, I. 58 



Tactile images, II. 65 



Tactile sensibiiitv, its cortical cen- 

 tre, I. 34, 61, 6J 



Taink, H., on unit}- of self, I. 355; 

 on alterations of ditto, 376; on 

 recollecting, 658. 670. On projec- 

 tion of sensations, II 33; on 

 images, 48, and their 'reduction,' 

 125-6; on reality, 291 



Takacs, II. 490 



Tarde, G , I. 263 



Taylok, C F., II. 99 



Tedium. I. 626 



Teleology, created by consciousness, 



I. 140-1; essence of intelligence, 

 482 



involved in the fact of essences, 



II. 335; its barrenness in the 

 natural .sciences, 665 



'Jendenry, feelings of, I. 250-4 



Thackekay, \V. iM., II. 434 



Therniometr}'. cerebral, I. 99 



' Thing,' II. 184, 259 



Thinking, the consciousness of, I. 

 300 £E. 



Thinking principle, I. 342 



Third dimension of space, II. 134 ff., 

 213 ff., 220 



Thompson, D. G.. I. 354; II. 663 



Thomson, Allen, I. 84 



Thought, synou3m for conscious- 

 ness at large, I. 186; the stream of. 

 Chapter IX: it tends to personal 

 form, 235; same thought never 

 comes twice, 231 ff. ; sense in 

 which it is continuous. 337; can 

 be carried on in any terms. 260-8; 

 "What constitutes its rational char- 

 acter, 269; is cognitive. 271; not 

 made up of parts, 376 ff. , 11. 79 

 ff. ; always partial to some of its ob- 

 jects, I. 284 ff. ; the consciousness 

 of it as a process, 300 ff". : the pres- 

 ent thought is the thinker, 369, 

 401; depends on material condi- 

 tions 553 



Thought readiuuc,' II. 525 , 



Time, occupied by neural and mental 

 processes, see reaction-time 



unconscious registration of, 301 



Time, the perception of. Chapter 

 XV; begins with duration, I. 609; 

 compared with perception of 

 space, 610 ff.; empty time not 

 perceived, 619; its discrete How, 

 621, 637; long intervals conceived 

 symbolically, 633 ff". ; variations 

 in our estimate of its length, 633 

 I ff.; cerebral process underlying, 



637 ff . 

 I TiscHER, I. 534, 537 



Touch, cortical centre for. I. 58 



Trance, see hypnotism 



Transcendentalist theory of the Self, 

 I. 343, 360 ff. ; criticised, 363 ff. 



Transitive states ofmiud, I. 243 ft'. 



TscHiscH, VON, I. 414, 560 



TCKE, U. H.. II. 130, 413 



Taylor, E. B.. II. 304 



Tympanic membrane, its tactile sen- 

 sibility, II. 140 



Tyndall, I. 147-8 



Ueberweg, I. 187 



Unconscious states of 3Iiud, proofs 

 of their existence, I. 164 ff. Ob- 

 jections. 164 ff. 



Unconsciousness, I. 199 ff. ; in hys- 

 terics, 303 ff. ; of useless sensa- 

 tions, 517 ff. 



Understanding of a sentence, I 381 



Units, psychic, I. 151 



Unity of original object, I. 487-8: II. 

 8; 183 ff. 



Universal conceptions, I. 473. See 

 general propomtions 



Unreality, the feeling of, II. 298 



Valentin. I. 557 



Varying concomitants, law of disso- 

 ciation by, I. 506 



Vennum, Lurancy, I. 397 



Ventriloquism, II. 184 



Verdon, R., I. 685 



Vertigo, II. 89. Mental vertigo, 

 309; optical, 506 



Vicarious function of brain-parts, I. 

 69. 142; II. 592 



ViERORDT, I. 616 ff.; II. 154, 173 



ViNTSCHGAU. I. 95-6 



Vision with head upside down, II. 



213 

 Visual centre in brain, I. 41 ff. 

 Visual space. II. 311 ff. 

 Visualizing power, II. 51-60 

 Vocalization, II. 407 

 Volition, see Will 



