About This Book
The author surveys sensory and mental errors, defining and classifying illusions across perception, introspection, memory, dreams, insight, and quasi-presentative errors. He analyzes physiological and psychological mechanisms—sensory limits, misinterpretation, preperception, expectation, and environmental conditions—distinguishing passive (organism/environment) and active (voluntary/involuntary) causes and their continuum with hallucination. Dreaming, hypnotic states, and variations of memory receive structural explanations linking neural activity, associative processes, and emotion to distorted recall, time perspective, and imaginative transformation. Throughout, scientific description and examples are used to explain how normal processes can produce systematic cognitive and perceptual errors.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
You May Also Like
A Beginner's Psychology
by Edward Bradford Titchener
A Compendium on the Soul
by Avicenna
A Defence of the Inquiry into Mesmerism & Phrenology / chiefly in relation to recent events in Lynn
by William Armes
A Dominie in Doubt
by Alexander Sutherland Neill
A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis
by Sigmund Freud
A Letter to the Right Honorable the Lord Chancellor, on the Nature and Interpretation of Unsoundness of Mind, and Imbecility of Intellect
by John Haslam


