| William James - 1902 - 728 str.
...answer that seems admissabk-. Ilie ren fired feeling occupies die eery same parts, and in the sain? manner, as the original feeling, and no other parts, nor in any other assignable manner. I imagine that if our present knowledge of the brain had been present to the earliest... | |
| 1904 - 618 str.
...coincided with the phenomenon of " the fixed idea " in enforcing the view that, in resuscitation, " the renewed feeling occupies the very same parts,...original feeling, and no other parts, nor in any other assignable manner ".2 This was to identify the revived with the actual feeling, and thereby was of... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 494 str.
...Ideation. We have thus a physiological foundation of the law arrived at on other grounds by Bain, vis. that "the renewed feeling occupies the very same parts, and in the same manner as the original feeling." According to Spencer, the renewal of the feeling is the faint revivification of the same processes... | |
| Nathan Albert Harvey - 1914 - 296 str.
...must be considered as almost beyond a doubt that the renewed feeling (reinstated process) occupies the same parts and in the same manner as the original feeling, and no other part and in no other manner that can be assigned" (Mind and Body, p. 89). Pillsbury says that "The... | |
| 1923 - 762 str.
...different cortical elements. On the other hand modern psychology has hardly wavered from the belief that "the renewed feeling occupies the very same parts and in the same manner as the original feeling." It can hardly be gainsaid that Freud's use of spatial metaphors in his description of the functions... | |
| Beatrice Edgell - 1924 - 186 str.
...one answer that seems admissible. The renewed feeling occupies the very same parts, and in the very same manner, as the original feeling, and no other parts, nor in any other assignable manner.' (ibid., pp. 355, 356.) Presumably Bain, like his predecessors — and, one may... | |
| Brian Beakley, Peter Ludlow - 1992 - 460 str.
...resuscitated feeling of resistance, a smell or a sound? There is only one answer that seems admissable. The renewed feeling occupies the very same parts,...original feeling, and no other parts, nor in any other assignable manner. I imagine that if our present knowledge of the brain had been present to the earliest... | |
| Malcolm Macmillan - 2002 - 582 str.
...the initial sensation and nerve currents that passed through the brain and out to the muscles. Hence the renewed feeling "occupies the very same parts and in the same manner as the original." When one recalled an energetic action, it was difficult to prevent oneself from repeating the movements... | |
| Oliver J. Thatcher - 2004 - 480 str.
...Ideation. We have thus a physiological foundation of the law arrived at on other grounds by Bain, viz. that "the renewed feeling occupies the very same parts, and in the same manner as the original feeling." According to Spencer, the renewal of the feeling is the faint revivification of the same processes... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1880 - 548 str.
...purely mental." In connection with this subject we may note that, according to Professor Bain, " ' Renewed feeling occupies the very same parts, and...parts, nor in any other manner that can be assigned.' It is an interesting and not improbable suggestion that this may be true in the history of brain action,... | |
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