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" “it would follow that our entire feeling of spiritual activity, or what commonly passes by that name, is really a feeling of bodily activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked.” There "
The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods - Page 563
1910
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The Principles of psychology v. 1, Volume 1

William James - 1890 - 716 pages
...cannot yet define should prove to be like unto these distinct portions in me, and I like other men, it would follow that our entire feeling of spiritual...activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked. Now, without pledging ourselves in any way to adopt this hypothesis, let us dally with it for a while...
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The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1

William James - 1890 - 712 pages
...define should prove to be like unto these distinct portions in me, and I like other men, it would foUow that our entire feeling of spiritual activity, or...activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked. Now, without pledging ourselves in any way to adopt this hypothesis, let us dally with it for a while...
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The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1

William James - 1890 - 720 pages
...cannot yet define should prove to be like iiuto these distinct portions in me, and I like other men, it would follow that our entire feeling of spiritual...that name, is really a feeling of bodily activities wliose exact nature J is by most men overlooked. Now, without pledging ourselves in any way to adopt...
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The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1

William James - 1890 - 716 pages
...should prove to be like iinto these distinct portions in me, and I like other men, it would fottoiv that our entire feeling of spiritual activity, or...really a feeling of bodily activities whose exact natur is by most men overlooked. Now, without pledging ourselves in any way to adopt thi hypothesis,...
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The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1

William James - 1890 - 718 pages
...commonly Jxlsse8 by that For some farther remarks on thet¿e feelings of movement see th. next chapter. name, is really a feeling of bodily activities whose exact nature ¿ is by most men overlooked. Now, without pledging ourselves in any way to adopt this hypothesis, let us daliy with it for a while...
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The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1

William James - 1890 - 728 pages
...cannot yet define should prove to be like unto these distinct portions in me, and I like other men, it would follow that our entire feeling of spiritual activity, or what commonly passes by fha¿ * For some farther remarks on these feelings of movement see the next hapter. name, is really...
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Psychological Review, Volume 33

James Mark Baldwin, James McKeen Cattell, Howard Crosby Warren, John Broadus Watson, Herbert Sidney Langfeld, Carroll Cornelius Pratt, Theodore Mead Newcomb - 1926 - 510 pages
...pronounced overt action is inhibited, to those feelings of spiritual activity analyzed by James into 'a feeling of bodily activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked.' If, now, we recognize that the process of thinking differs from any other trialanderror activity mainly...
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Psychological Review, Volume 33

James Mark Baldwin, James McKeen Cattell, Howard Crosby Warren, John Broadus Watson, Herbert Sidney Langfeld, Carroll Cornelius Pratt, Theodore Mead Newcomb - 1926 - 512 pages
...pronounced overt action is inhibited, to those feelings of spiritual activity analyzed by James into 'a feeling of bodily activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked.' If, now, we recognize that the process of thinking differs from any other trialanderror activity mainly...
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Philosophy of Mind

George Trumbull Ladd - 1895 - 450 pages
...between the head and throat." And on this basis the conclusion, as scientifically defensible, is reached that "our entire feeling of spiritual activity, or...activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked." This is "the real nucleus of our personal identity." Hence follows the conclusion in philosophy that...
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Instinct and Reason: An Essay Concerning the Relation of Instinct to Reason ...

Henry Rutgers Marshall - 1898 - 672 pages
...consider merely the moment's experience. Or as Professor James puts it (Psyclwlogy, vol. ip 301) : " Our entire feeling of spiritual activity, or what...activities whose exact nature is by most men overlooked." The increment to this unanalysable whole we speak of ordinarily as the presentation to the ego * if...
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