Memory: What it is and how to Improve itD. Appleton and Company, 1888 - 340 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 39.
Strana viii
... regard to specific details that naturally follow as effects . Our in- sight into laws weakens our hold of special instances . Knowing the law of eclipses , we can calculate all past and all future instances , and we do not care viii ...
... regard to specific details that naturally follow as effects . Our in- sight into laws weakens our hold of special instances . Knowing the law of eclipses , we can calculate all past and all future instances , and we do not care viii ...
Strana xx
... regard each class of nerves as capable of conveying impressions in either direction , -sensory nerves , while primarily afferent , being secondarily efferent , and motor nerves , while pri- marily efferent , being secondarily afferent ...
... regard each class of nerves as capable of conveying impressions in either direction , -sensory nerves , while primarily afferent , being secondarily efferent , and motor nerves , while pri- marily efferent , being secondarily afferent ...
Strana xxiii
... regard to the possibilities for im- proving the memory . What an unspeakable advantage it would be to a man if everything that he had ever read , or heard , or seen , or thought , or done , could be so laid up in his mind that he should ...
... regard to the possibilities for im- proving the memory . What an unspeakable advantage it would be to a man if everything that he had ever read , or heard , or seen , or thought , or done , could be so laid up in his mind that he should ...
Strana xxv
... regard to the permanent injury that may thereby be done to it . It has been the author's endeavour throughout the volume to bring out the practical bearings of his views upon education . In dealing with this subject the author has found ...
... regard to the permanent injury that may thereby be done to it . It has been the author's endeavour throughout the volume to bring out the practical bearings of his views upon education . In dealing with this subject the author has found ...
Strana 3
... regard to results . They act usually upon the spur of the moment and are constantly making mistakes . Even the teachings of experience are in a great measure lost upon them from lack of persistence . Such persons are never long in one ...
... regard to results . They act usually upon the spur of the moment and are constantly making mistakes . Even the teachings of experience are in a great measure lost upon them from lack of persistence . Such persons are never long in one ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
able acquired action activity afferent nerves asso association attention Bain become blood body brain called Carpenter cells cerebellum cerebrum colour condition connected consciousness continued conveyed cord corpora quadrigemina corpus striatum cultivation degree depends direction distinct distinguish effect excited exercise existence fact faculty feeling form of memory G. H. Lewes give grey matter Hamilton hearing Hence ideas imagination impressions intellectual John Locke knowledge less Lewes material Maudsley means medulla medulla oblongata mental image mind motion motor movements muscles muscular nature necessary nerve fibres nervous system once optic nerve organ of sense original particular passes perceived perception performed persons phenomena physical pia mater present principle produce readily recall received recollection regard remember retina Ribot sarcolemma sensibility sensory sight smell sound spinal spinal cord Stewart stimulus structure substance surface Taine taste things thought tion tissue touch uncon unconscious vibrations whole words
Populárne pasáže
Strana 58 - Nature will be reported. All things are engaged in writing their history. The planet, the pebble, goes attended by its shadow. The rolling rock leaves its scratches on the mountain ; the river, its channel in the soil ; the animal, its bones in the stratum ; the fern and leaf, their modest epitaph in the coal.
Strana 238 - I was once told by a near relative of mine, that having in her childhood fallen into a river, and being on the very verge of death but for the...
Strana 10 - Of this, at least, I feel assured, that there is no such thing as forgetting possible to the mind ; a thousand accidents may and will interpose a veil between our present consciousness and the secret inscriptions on the mind; accidents of the same sort will also rend away this veil ; but alike, whether veiled or unveiled, the inscription remains for ever...
Strana 85 - For the good that I would I do not : but the evil that I would not, that I do.
Strana 53 - ... to subsist here sensible intelligent beings, and for several years continued us in such a state, can and will restore us to the like state of sensibility in another world...
Strana 150 - We have no right, however, to say that it is limited to any one part of the organism ; for even if we admit that the nervous system is the part to which it is proximately united, still the nervous system is itself universally ramified throughout the body ; and we have no more right to deny that the mind feels at the fingerpoints, as consciousness assures us, than to assert that it thinks exclusively in the brain.
Strana 189 - ... that every point of a medium through which a ray of light passes is affected with a succession of periodical movements, regularly recurring at equal intervals, no less than five hundred millions of millions of times in a single second ! that it is by such movements, communicated to the nerves of our eyes, that we see...
Strana 249 - On being interrogated as to the method by which he obtained these results, the boy constantly declared that he did not know how the answers came into his mind. In the act of multiplying two numbers together, and in the raising of powers, it was evident (alike from the facts just stated, and from the...
Strana 52 - Man having been created after this manner, it is said, as a consequence, that "man became a living soul"; whence it may be inferred (unless we had rather take the heathen writers for our teachers respecting the nature of the soul) that man is a living being, intrinsically and properly one and individual, not compound or separable, not, according to the common opinion, made up and framed of two distinct and different natures, as of soul and body, but that the whole man is soul, and the soul man, that...
Strana 214 - It is wonderful how even the casualties of life seem to bow to a spirit that will not bow to them, and yield to subserve a design which they may, in their first apparent tendency, threaten to frustrate.