It is even more at fault in respect to the emotions than in respect to the cognitions. The doctrine that all the desires, all the sentiments, are generated by the experiences of the individual, is so glaringly at variance with facts that I wonder how... Principles of psychology - Strana 498autor/autoři: Herbert Spencer - 1910Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Herbert Spencer - 1871 - 660 str.
...appearances assumed by other persons and the receipt of gratifications from them; and then the vague bedy of the emotion which it has inherited assumes a more...glaringly at variance with facts, that I cannot but wonder hew any one sheuld ever have entertained it. Not to dwell on the multiform passions displayed by the... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1873 - 516 str.
...bodily growth and structure to exercise, forgetting the innate tendency to assume the adult form." " The doctrine that all the desires, all the sentiments,...variance with facts, that I cannot but wonder how anyone should ever have entertained it." The circumstances which account for the existence of the individual-experience... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1873 - 524 str.
...bodily growth and structure to exercise, forgetting the innate tendency to assume the adult form." " The doctrine that all the desires, all the sentiments,...variance with facts, that I cannot but wonder how anyone should ever have entertained it." The circumstances which account for the existence of the individual-experience... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1876 - 660 str.
...respect to the cognitions. The doctrine that all tho desires, all the sentiments, are generated by tho experiences of the individual, is so glaringly at...amount of experience as could possibly suffice for the elaberation of them, I will simply point to the most powerful of passions — the amatory passion —... | |
| 1878 - 818 str.
...tendency to assume the adult form. . . . The doctrine that all the desires, all the sentiments, zfre generated by the experiences of the individual, is...wonder how any one should ever have entertained it." The circumstances which ac- ' count for the existence of the individual-experience psychology, and... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1890 - 682 str.
...of knowing what the natural language means. But in course of time personal experiences teach it tho connexion that exists between these appearances assumed...glaringly at variance with facts, that I cannot but wonder bowany one should ever have entertained it. Not to dwell on the multiform passions displayed by the... | |
| Lafcadio Hearn - 1896 - 408 str.
..."If possible," observes Herbert Spencer, " it is even more at fault in respect to the emotions than to the cognitions. The doctrine that all the desires,...that I cannot but wonder how any one should ever have ventured to entertain it." It was Mr. Spencer, also, who showed us that words like "instinct," "intuition,"... | |
| Elizabeth Bisland, Lafcadio Hearn - 1906 - 600 str.
...life. " The experience-hypothesis," says Spencer, " is inadequate to account for emotional phenomena. It is even more at fault in respect to the emotions...individual, is so glaringly at variance with facts that I wonder how any one should ever have entertained it." And he cites "the multiform passions of the infant,... | |
| Lafcadio Hearn - 1907 - 318 str.
..."If possible," observes Herbert Spencer, "it is even more at fault in respect to the emotions than to the cognitions. The doctrine that all the desires,...at variance with facts that I cannot but wonder how anyone should ever have ventured to entertain it." It was Mr. Spencer, also, who showed us that words... | |
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