Outlines of psychology / by Harald Höffding ; translated by Mary E. Lowndes.
- Harald Høffding
- Date:
- 1891
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Outlines of psychology / by Harald Höffding ; translated by Mary E. Lowndes. Source: Wellcome Collection.
378/390 (page 364)
![Q Quincøy, Dø, emergence of forgotten memories, 143 ; the swellingof time, 189; lost power of coming to a decision, 339 R Realism as artistic tendency,. 182, seq. : as contrast to epistemological idealism, 355 Reality, criterion of, in the province of ex- ternal experience, 206, seq. ; cf. 130, seq. ; in the province of will, 340, seq. Refløx movement, 37, seq.; 57, 91, 310, seq. Relativity, law of, in the province of sen- sation, 114, seq. ; in the province of re- presentations and concepts, 216, seq. ; in the province of feeling, 275, seq. : in the province of volition, 314, 329 Religious feeling, 261, seq. Repentance, 244, 260, 344, 348 Repetition, as condition of conscious life, 121, seq. ; its importance for thought. 176, seq.; 213 ; its influence on feeling, 279, seq. Resignation, 334 Resolve, 328, seq. Reverence, 261 Richet, memory as condition of pain, 96, 224 ; pain is intermittent, 278 Ridiculous, the feeling of the, 290—297 Rousseau, independence and importance of feeling, 88, seq. ; 96; the feeling for the beauty of nature, 267 ; polemic against Moliere, 295 S Schiller, “Der lanz,” 154; pleasure and love, 251; origin of art, 265 Schiodte (J. C.), 183 Schneider (G. H.)> on manifestations of consciousness in the lowest animals, 97 ; on successive and simultaneous contrast, Schopenhauer, “der Wille zum Leben,’ 93 ; on the sexual instinet, 251 ; negative character of pleasure, 284 Self and Not-Self, 3—6, 223, seq. ; psycho- logical conception of the self, 136, seq. Sensation, 101—121 ; sensation and per- ception, 121, seq. ; sensation and feeling, 221—233 ; analogy o f sensations, 306 Sexual séløetion, <251, 264 Shaftesbury, 251 Shakspeare, KingLear, 109,155 ; Othello, 237; Hamlet, 238, 337; Richard III., 252 ; Macbetli, 300; Shakspeare’s hum- our, 297 Sibhern, identity-hypothesis, 69; evolu- tion takes place sporadically, 85 ; feeling and will in relation to cognition, 98 ; on sensation and perception, 125; associa- tion between the whole and the parts, 154 ; mixed feelings, 238 Single element of consciousness, 137 Sinith (Adam), birds’ instinetive know- ledge of surroundings, 194; an impulse of imitation the basis of sympathy, 246 Space, apprehension of,'190—205 ; absolute space and psychological space, 205 Speculative philosophy, see Metaphysics Spencer (Herbert), on the mythological conception of the mind, 7, seq. ; laws of evolution common to mind and matter, 85 ; explanation of the modalities of sense by the evolution-hypothesis, 106 *, rhythm of movement, 122 ; the inverse relation of sensation and perception, 129 *, the appre- hension of space explained by the evolu- tion-hypothesis, 203; sympathy explained by the evolution-hypothesis, 250, 252; on pleasure in sorrow, 258 ; play as the germ of art, 265 \ biology of feeling ex- plained by the evolution-hypothesis, 274 ; rhythm of the expressions of emo- tion, 278 ; the ridiculous, 296 ; expansion of feeling, 303; hypothesis as to the evolution of conscious life, 354 Spinoza, notion of substance, 13, 85^ on association of feelings, 239 *, psychological development of sympathy, 244; disin- terested malice, 252 ; disinterested love, 259 ; the law of relativity in the province o'f feeling, 275, 278 ; feeling can be sup- pressed only by feeling, 284 ; dependence of the will on memory, 327 ; resignation, 334 Spiritualism, 12, seq. ; dual is tic spintual- ism, 55, seq. ; monistic spiritualism, 62, seq. Spontaneous movement, 118, 131, 3°9> seq. Staél (Madame de), on improvuation, 181 ; on expansion of feeling, 303 Stumpf, polemic against the law of rela- tivity, 116 ; nativist theory of the appre- hension of space, 198, 201, 204 Subject and Object, 217 Subjectivity, theory of, 219 Sublime, the feeling of the. 288, seq. ; 297 Successive apprehension clearer than sim- ultaneous, 114, seq. ; 163, 199, 237, seq.] 290 Sympathy, 235, 244, seq. T Tøgnér (E.), want of verbal expressions for certain ideas, 172 Teleology, 302 Temperament, 349 Thirst, 226, seq. . Thought, elementår^ thought in all sensa- tion, 116 ; thought in all perception, 130; in all association of ideas, 159 ; on thought](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28135519_0378.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)