The Journal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology, כרך 12J. Churchill., 1859 |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 100
עמוד 22
... kind , remarked , ' that the question was not whether the patient was to recover , because of that he had no doubt , but how long the disease was to last ! ' - she died within a week after this opinion was uttered . Of Esquirol's 92 ...
... kind , remarked , ' that the question was not whether the patient was to recover , because of that he had no doubt , but how long the disease was to last ! ' - she died within a week after this opinion was uttered . Of Esquirol's 92 ...
עמוד 32
... kind . She had seen her niece taking her first communion , and , on going out of the church , a gendarme took her away to prison , where she had died . May 10th : The improvement was progressive ; she still answered slowly , but ...
... kind . She had seen her niece taking her first communion , and , on going out of the church , a gendarme took her away to prison , where she had died . May 10th : The improvement was progressive ; she still answered slowly , but ...
עמוד 44
... kind in a series of time ; so that number is the synthesis of all the variety of our homogeneous intuition in general . This view applies equally to unity , plurality , and tota- lity for unity as applied to an object means that it is ...
... kind in a series of time ; so that number is the synthesis of all the variety of our homogeneous intuition in general . This view applies equally to unity , plurality , and tota- lity for unity as applied to an object means that it is ...
עמוד 53
... kind of appendix to the second postulate , he adds some paragraphs by way of refuting Material Idealism , which pronounces the existence of external objects either doubtful or untrue . Descartes said there was nothing absolutely unques ...
... kind of appendix to the second postulate , he adds some paragraphs by way of refuting Material Idealism , which pronounces the existence of external objects either doubtful or untrue . Descartes said there was nothing absolutely unques ...
עמוד 56
... kind of intellectual intuition - a faculty which Kant wholly denies to man . Several serious consequences flow from his theory of " positive noumena , " but they belong chiefly to his doctrine of " reason " as distinct from ...
... kind of intellectual intuition - a faculty which Kant wholly denies to man . Several serious consequences flow from his theory of " positive noumena , " but they belong chiefly to his doctrine of " reason " as distinct from ...
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
action admitted affection appear attended brain canton of Geneva cause cent cerebellum cerebral cerebrum certificate character Commissioners Commissioners in Lunacy committed conception condition confined Conolly consciousness counties crime criminal death delirium delirium tremens delusion dementia disease Don Quixote doubt encephalitis epilepsy evidence examined excitement existence experience fact faculties females frequently give ideas imbecile increase influence insanity instances intellectual jury Kant knowledge labour Lord Shaftesbury Lordship lunacy lunatic asylum males mania manifested matter means melancholia ment mental mind monomania months moral mother murder muscular nature necessary nervous never noumena noumenon number of suicides object observed opinion paralysis patients pauper lunatics period persons phenomena physician plaintiff present principle prisoner proportion question reason regard relation remarks Report respect result returns Ruck sensation sense Stilwell supposed symptoms testator things thought tion told treatment witness workhouses
קטעים בולטים
עמוד 141 - It is the nature of an hypothesis, when once a man has conceived it, that it assimilates every thing to itself, as proper nourishment; and, from the first moment of your begetting it, it generally grows the stronger by every thing you see, hear, read, or understand. This is of great use.
עמוד 226 - ... to be kept in strict custody in such place and in such manner as to the court shall seem fit, until his Majesty's pleasure shall be known...
עמוד 175 - Strong is the lion — like a coal His eyeball — like a bastion's mole His chest against the foes: Strong the gier-eagle on his sail, Strong against tide th' enormous whale Emerges, as he goes.
עמוד 316 - ... with their correlatives freedom of choice and responsibility — man being all this, it is at once obvious that the principal part of his being is his mental power. In Nature there is nothing great but Man, In Man there is nothing great but Mind.
עמוד 583 - Who was her father? Who was her mother? Had she a sister? Had she a brother? Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet than all other? Alas! for the rarity Of Christian charity Under the sun ! Oh! it was pitiful! Near a whole city full Home she had none.
עמוד 317 - God and what supposes liberty, — the virtuous, the immortal. "•Man reveals God: for man, by his intelligence, rises above nature, and, in virtue of this intelligence, is conscious of himself as a power not only independent of, but opposed to, nature, and capable of resisting, conquering, and controlling her.
עמוד 590 - These being the peculiarities of this singular crime, it is surely an astonishing fact, that all the evidence we possess respecting it points to one great conclusion, and can leave no doubt on our minds that suicide is merely the product of the general condition of society, and that the individual felon only carries into effect what is a necessary consequence of preceding circumstances.
עמוד 175 - Glorious the enraptured main; Glorious the northern lights astream; Glorious the song, when God's the theme; Glorious the thunder's roar: Glorious Hosanna from the den; Glorious the catholic Amen; Glorious the martyr's gore: Glorious— more glorious — is the crown Of Him that brought salvation down, By meekness called thy Son: Thou that stupendous truth believed; — And now the matchless deed's achieved, Determined, dared, and done!
עמוד 175 - Sweet is the dew that falls betimes, And drops upon the leafy limes ; Sweet, Hermon's fragrant air: Sweet is the lily's silver bell, And sweet the wakeful tapers' smell That watch for early prayer.
עמוד 335 - ... parts, neither half can, by itself, be an object of vision, or visual consciousness. They are, severally and apart, to consciousness as zero. But it is evident, that each half must, by itself, have produced in us a certain modification, real though unperceived ; for as the perceived whole is nothing but the union of the unperceived halves, so the perception — the perceived affection itself of which we are conscious — is only the sum of two modifications, each of which severally eludes our...