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Principles of mental physiology : with their applications to the training and discipline of the mind, and the study of its morbid conditions / William Benjamin Carpenter.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Carpenter, William Benjamin, 1813-1885, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Mind and body.
Psychology, Pathological.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (lxiii, 737 pages) : illustrations
Edition:
Fourth edition.
Other Title:
Principles of mental physiology with their applications to the training and discipline of the mind and the study of its morbid conditions
Place of Publication:
London : H.S. King & Co., 1876.
Summary:
I now send it forth as a contribution to that Science of Human Nature, which has yet (as it seems to me) to be built-up on a much broader basis than any Philosopher has hitherto taken as his foundation. To the character of a System of Psychology, this treatise makes no pretension whatever; being simply designed to supplement existing Systems of Physiology and Metaphysics, by dealing with a group of subjects, which, occupying the border-ground between the two, have been almost entirely neglected in both. Hence in treating of Sensation, I have not entered into those details on the Physiology of the Senses which are readily accessible elsewhere; but have especially applied myself to the elucidation of the share which the Mind has, not only in the interpretation of Sense-impressions, but in the production of Sensorial states not less real to the Ego who experiences them than are those called-forth by external objects--a topic of the greatest importance in reference to the value of all Testimony given under a Mental preconception. And, in like manner, I have done no more than enumerate a large proportion of those principal modes of Mental activity, which are commonly designated as Intellectual Faculties, Propensities, and Emotions; in order that I might have space to bring into clear view that distinction between their automatic and their volitional operation, which has long appeared to me the only sound basis, on the one hand, for Education and Self-discipline, and, on the other, for that Scientific study of the various forms of abnormal Mental activity, which, rightly cultivated, is probably the most promising field of Psychological inquiry.
Contents:
Of the general relations between mind and body
Of the nervous system and its functions
Of attention
Of sensation
Of perception and instinct
Of ideation and ideo-motor action
Of the emotions
Of habit
Of the will
Of memory
Of common sense
Of imagination
Of unconscious cerebration
Of reverie and abstraction: Electro-biology
Of sleep, dreaming, and somnambulism
Of mesmerism and spiritualism
Of intoxication and delirium
Of insanity
Influence of mental states on the organic functions
Of mind and will in nature.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

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