The Emotions and the Will

Couverture
Longmans, Green, 1880 - 604 pages
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Table des matières

Emotional Characters of Feeling 8 The PHYSICAL SIDE and the MENTAL SIDE
10
The Physical Side of Pleasure
11
The Physical Side of Pain
12
Feeling as Indifference or Neutral Excitement
13
Volitional Characters of Feeling 14 Feelings tested by conduct
14
Persistence of Feelings recurrence in idea
15
Emotion or Feeling heightens the intensity of an idea
16
The Emotions affect the judgment of true and false
21
Expression
27
Fixing a standard from known individuals
33
Certain feelings are mutually exclusive
38
THE RISE AND SUBSIDENCE OF FEELINGS
42
PAGR
44
The history of the highest races does not fall in with
50
Doubtfulness of Moral Instincts in themselves
56
Feelings that are highly dependent on bodily conditions
62
The predatory urgencies come short of the pure pleasure
65
CONTENTS xxvii
74
CHAPTER IV
78
Sympathy defined
90
First condition of Sympathyexperience of Feelings
113
Fellowfeeling supposes a regard to our own happiness
119
CHARACTERS OF THE EMOTION
127
The Parental Feeling
139
Emotional Gratitude Justice
145
CHARACTERS OF FEAR
155
In Children
161
Reaction from Terror Comfort of Security
168
Expression described
174
EMOTION OF POWER
192
others
205
Selfcomplacency Selfgratulation
206
Selfrespect a loftier feeling ib 9 Selfsufficingness
207
Approbation involved in the primitive social situation ib 11 Circumstances that heighten the effect of Approbation and Disapprobation
208
Feeling of being Admired
209
Arts of Politesse
211
Disapprobation Censure c ib 16 Shame ib 17 Bearing of education on the emotions of Self
212
Selflove and Selfishness Prudential Calculation ib 19 In one sense Disinterested actions a part of Self
213
CHAPTER XII
215
Emotion of Similarity in diversity a species of Surprise ib 3 Discoveries of Identity give the pleasure of relief Emotions of Knowledge
217
Pains of Contradiction The regard to Truth
218
CHAPTER XIII
220
Conditions rendering pursuit agreeable ib 3 Ends of pursuit that best admit of suspense
221
PAGE
222
223
223
226
226
General statement as regards Feeling Examples
228
PAGE
230
Unity in VarietyProportions Statement of Laws of Proportion
238
Expressiveness of Form and Outline
241
Beauty of Support
243
Ease in Support 23 Symmetry
244
Beauty of Movement 25 FitnessThe Esthetic of Utility 26 Beauty of Order 27 The Sublime Complex aspects of Power 241 ib 242 243 244 245
245
Human Power the literal sublime
248
Sublime of Support
249
Sublime of Space ib 31 Greatness of Time
250
Mineral and Vegetable Kingdoms Surface of the globe
251
The Animal Kingdomits beauties and deformities
252
The Human Form
253
Artistic operation of Idealising
254
The Imitative Fine Arts Conditions of artistic imita tion
255
Adam Smiths theory of Sympathy
273
The Principle of Utility Necessary qualifications in the Statement of Utility
275
The usual objections to Utility are sentimental
277
The existing rules combine Utility and Sentiment
279
Examples of Sentiment converted into moral rules
280
Process of enactment of moral rules
282
The selfformed or Independent Conscience
288
THE WILL
296
CHAPTER I
303
Natural Vigour Excitement Mental Stimulants
310
doctrine of Evolution
318
Feelings of Respiration Warmth and Chillness
324
Snuffing sweet Odours recoiling from the opposite
330
Carrying
337
Faculty of Imitation
344
Acting on a wish
350
CHAPTER IV
358
The thoughts are instrumental in commanding
375
CHAPTER V
383
Intellectual efficacy of neutral excitementstamping
400
Conflict of the Actual with the Ideal
403
Example
410
Deliberation no exception to the theory of the Will
416
CHAPTER VIII
423
First alternativeEndurance
424
Second alternativeIdeal or Imaginary action
426
Feelings per sisting in idea
430
wants of the system pleasure tasted
433
sexual passion things inexperienced
434
Inquiry into the proper object of Desire whether it be Pleasure or Pain or something indifferent Butlers doctrine on the subject Mr Sidgwicks views
436
CHAPTER IX
440
Control of Sense and Appetite
441
Example from early rising
442
Necessity for a strong inititative
443
what is meant by a habit of
445
Suppression of Instinctive Movements
446
Changing the preponderance of Emotion as a whole
447
Culture applied to special emotions
448
Courage
449
Tender Emotion
450
Malevolent sentiment as lust of Power
451
PlotInterest
452
How sudden conversions are possible
453
Spontaneity modified by habit
454
MORAL INABILITY Consists in remediable weakness
479
Responsibility means punishment Limits to the
493
Our happiness and misery dependent on the forecast
507
Belief in the Supernatural
529
CONSCIOUSNESS
539
Meanings of the term Self
541
L Mental
545
The Active States
548
Special intellectual value of the mental form of excite
554
A sensation combines a present shock with the cumula
560
Fulness of the Sensation in details Ease in main
566
What is it to be cognizant of a thing?
567
Literary genius and language as means of selection
573
The Ontological problem of the Reality of an Inde
583
A On the most general physical conditions of Consciousness
589
B Classifications of the Emotions Herbert Spencer Reid
601

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Fréquemment cités

Page 604 - Lectures on the History of England from the Earliest Times to the Death of King Edward II. By W. LONGMAN, FSA Maps and Illustrations. 8vo. 15*.
Page 605 - History of the Rise and Influence of the Spirit of Rationalism in Europe. By WEH LECKY, MA 2 vols.

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