CHAPTER I | PAGE |
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WHAT PSYCHOLOGY IS AND DOES | 1 |
Varieties of Psychology | 2 |
Psychology as Related to Other Sciences | 5 |
The Science of Consciousness | 7 |
The Science of Behavior | 8 |
Introspection | 10 |
Objective Observation | 11 |
General Lines of |
Psychological Investigation | 14 |
Summary and Attempt at a Definition | 17 |
Exercises | 19 |
References | 20 |
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CHAPTER II |
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REACTIONS | 21 |
The Reaction Time Experiment | 22 |
Reflex Action | 24 |
The Nerves in Reflex Action | 26 |
Internal Construction of the Nerves and Nerve Centers | 31 |
The Synapse | 34 |
CoÖrdination | 37 |
Reactions in General | 39 |
Exercises | 42 |
References | 44 |
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CHAPTER III |
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REACTIONS OF DIFFERENT LEVELS | 45 |
Different Sorts of Stimuli | 47 |
The Motor Centers, Lower and Higher | 49 |
How the Brain Produces Muscular Movements | 53 |
Facilitation and Inhibition | 54 |
Super-motor Centers in the Cortex | 56 |
Speech Centers | 57 |
The Auditory Centers | 59 |
The Visual Centers | 62 |
Cortical Centers for the Other Senses | 68 |
Lower Sensory Centers | 64 |
The Cerebellum | 66 |
Different Levels of Reaction | 65 |
Exercises | 67 |
References | 67 |
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CHAPTER IV |
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TENDENCIES TO REACTION | 68 |
Purposive Behavior | 70 |
Organic States that Influence Behavior | 72 |
Preparation for Action | 74 |
Preparatory Reactions | 77 |
What the Preparatory Reactions Accomplish | 79 |
What a Tendency Is, in Terms of Nerve Action | 82 |
Motives | 84 |
Exercises | 86 |
References | 88 |
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CHAPTER V |
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NATIVE AND ACQUIRED TRAITS | 89 |
The Source of Native Traits | 90 |
Reactions Appearing at Birth Must Be Native | 91 |
Reactions That Cannot Be Learned Must Be Native | 92 |
Experimental Detection of Native Reactions | 93 |
Is Walking Native or Acquired? | 95 |
Universality as a Criterion of Native Reactions | 97 |
Some Native Traits Are Far from Being Universal | 98 |
Why Acquired Traits Differ from One Individual to Another | 99 |
What Mental Traits Are Native? | 100 |
Exercises | 103 |
References | 104 |
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CHAPTER VI |
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INSTINCT | 105 |
The Difference Between an Instinct and a Reflex | 107 |
An Instinct Is a Native Reaction-Tendency | 109 |
Fully and Partially Organized Instincts | 111 |
Instincts Are Not Ancestral Habits | 113 |
Instincts Not Necessarily Useful in the Struggle for Existence | 114 |
The So-called Instincts of Self-preservation and of Reproduction | 115 |
Exercises | 117 |
References | 117 |
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CHAPTER VII |
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EMOTION | 118 |
Organic States That Are Not Usually Classed as Emotions | 119 |
How These Organic States Differ from Regular Emotions | 120 |
The Organic State in Anger | 121 |
Glandular Responses During Emotion | 122 |
The Nerves Concerned in Internal Emotional Response | 124 |
The Emotional State as a Preparatory Reaction | 125 |
"Expressive Movements," Another Sort of Preparatory Reactions | 126 |
Do Sensations of These Various Preparatory Reactions Constitute the Conscious State of Emotion? | 128 |
The James-Lange Theory of the Emotions | 129 |
Emotion and Impulse | 130 |
Emotion Sometimes Generates Impulse | 132 |
Emotion and Instinct | 134 |
The Higher Emotions | 136 |
Exercises | 136 |
References | 136 |
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CHAPTER VIII |
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INVENTORY OF HUMAN INSTINCTS AND PRIMARY EMOTIONS | 137 |
Classification | 138 |
Responses to Organic Needs | 139 |
Instinctive Responses to Other Persons | 145 |
The Play Instincts | 151 |
Exercises | 170 |
References | 171 |
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CHAPTER IX |
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THE FEELINGS | 172 |
Pleasantness and Unpleasantness Are Simple Feelings | 173 |
Felling-tone of Sensations | 174 |
Theories of Feeling | 175 |
Sources of Pleasantness and Unpleasantness | 178 |
Primary Likes and Dislikes | 180 |
Other Proposed Elementary Feelings | 184 |
Exercises | 186 |
References | 186 |
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CHAPTER X |
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SENSATION | 187 |
The Sense Organs | 188 |
Analysis of Sensations | 197 |
The Skin Senses | 197 |
The Sense of Taste | 201 |
The Sense of Smell | 203 |
Organic Sensations | 204 |
The Sense of Sight | 204 |
Simpler Forms of the Color Sense | 209 |
Visual Sensations as Related to the Stimulus | 212 |
Color Mixing | 214 |
What Are the Elementary Visual Sensations? | 216 |
Theories of Color Vision | 220 |
Adaptation | 224 |
Rod and Cone Vision | 226 |
After-images | 226 |
Contrast | 227 |
The Sense of Hearing | 228 |
Comparison of Sight and Hearing | 231 |
Theory of Hearing | 234 |
Senses of Bodily Movement | 236 |
Exercises | 241 |
References | 243 |
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CHAPTER XI |
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ATTENTION | 244 |
The Stimulus, or What Attracts Attention | 245 |
The Motor Reaction in Attention | 248 |
The Shifting of Attention | 251 |
Laws of Attention and Laws of Reaction in General | 256 |
Sustained Attention | 257 |
Distraction | 259 |
Doing Two Things at Once | 260 |
The Span of Attention | 261 |
Summary of the Laws of Attention | 262 |
Attention and Degree of Consciousness | 265 |
The Management of Attention | 267 |
Theory of Attention | 268 |
Exercises | 270 |
References | 270 |
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CHAPTER XII |
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INTELLIGENCE | 271 |
Intelligence Tests | 272 |
Performance Tests | 275 |
Group Testing | 276 |
Some Results of the Intelligence Tests | 278 |
Limitations of the Intelligence Tests | 281 |
The Correlation of Abilities | 288 |
General Factors in Intelligence | 285 |
Special Aptitudes | 288 |
Heredity of Intelligence and of Special Aptitudes | 289 |
Intelligence and the Brain | 292 |
Exercises | 294 |
References | 295 |
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CHAPTER XIII |
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LEARNING AND HABIT FORMATION | 296 |
Acquired Reactions Are Modified Native Reactions | 297 |
Acquired Tendencies | 299 |
Animal Learning | 302 |
Summary of Animal Learning | 310 |
Human Learning | 311 |
Human Compared with Animal Learning | 313 |
Learning by Observation | 317 |
The Learning of Complex Practical Performances | 321 |
Higher Units and Overlapping | 323
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Moderate Skill Acquired in the Ordinary Day's Work | 326 |
Habit | 328 |
Exercises | 330 |
References | 331 |
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CHAPTER XIV |
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MEMORY | 332 |
The Process of Memorizing | 333 |
Economy in Memorizing | 333 |
Unintentional Learning | 346 |
Retention | 348 |
Recall | 364 |
Recognition | 357 |
Memory Training | 360 |
Exercises | 364 |
References | 365 |
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CHAPTER XV |
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ASSOCIATION AND MENTAL IMAGERY | 366 |
What Can Be Recalled | 366 |
Memory Images | 368 |
Limitations of Imagery | 371 |
The Question of Non-Sensory Recall | 373 |
Hallucinations | 375 |
Free Association | 376 |
Controlled Association | 381 |
Examples of Controlled Association | 384 |
Exercises | 386 |
References | 388 |
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CHAPTER XVI |
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THE LAWS OF ASSOCIATION | 389 |
The Law of Exercise | 389 |
The Law of Effect | 391 |
Limitations of the Law of Exercise | 393 |
Association by Similarity | 395 |
Association by Contiguity | 396 |
The Law of Combination | 398 |
The Law of Combination in Recall | 413 |
The Laws of Learning in Terms of the Neurones | 414 |
Exercises | 418 |
References | 418 |
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CHAPTER XVII |
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PERCEPTION | 418 |
Some Definitions | 421 |
The Difference Between Perception and Sensation | 423 |
Perception and Image | 425 |
Perception and Motor Reaction | 427 |
What Sort of Response, Then, Is Perception? | 431 |
Practiced Perception | 433 |
Corrected Perception | 435 |
Sensory Data Serving as Signs of Various Sorts of Fact | {1} CHAPTER I WHAT PSYCHOLOGY IS AND DOES
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