INDEX OF SUBJECTS
- Absent-minded acts, conservation of, 50.
- Affective states, suppression of, by conflict, 455.
- Affects, see Emotion.
- as conative force of ideas, 448.
- linking of, to ideas fundamental for the pathology of the psychoneuroses, 449.
- Amnesia, continuous, 76;
- episodic, 69;
- epochal, 74.
- from conflict, 71, 508–518.
- theory of, following emotion, 509–514.
- different forms of, following emotion, 514–517.
- Anxiety neurosis, emergence of emotion from a subconscious idea in, 382, 526.
- Association neuroses, 279, 527.
- Association psychoses, 278.
- Bashfulness as resultant of emotional conflict, 520.
- Behavior, acquired and instinctive, 237, 238;
- conscious and unconscious, 230.
- Coconscious, the meaning of the, 247–254.
- Coconscious ideas, 168, 249, 254.
- Coconscious processes, auto-analysis of the content of, 171, 176.
- Complex of ideas, definition of a, 265.
- Complexes (systematized), dissociated, as phases of multiple personality, 299–302.
- emotional, 267;
- organization of emotional, 267–274.
- systematized, 283:
- Subject systems, 284;
- alternation of, 288;
- in dissociated personality, 288.
- Chronological systems, 290;
- differentiated by amnesia, 290–294.
- Mood systems, 294;
- regarded as a “side to one’s character,” 295;
- illustrated by William Sharp, 296.
- unconscious, organization of, in hypnotic and other dissociated conditions, 302–306;
- in pathological states, 305;
- in psychotherapeutics, 288–289, 304;
- underlying the individual, social, civic and national conscience, public opinion, Sittlichkeit, etc., 307.
- Conflict, from conative force of emotion, 71, 454.
- between conscious and subconscious sentiments, 460, 467–480;
- in pathological conditions, 478;
- under experimental conditions, 470–478.
- Conflict between emotional impulses, 454;
- and sentiments, 455.
- between two subconscious processes, 480.
- general phenomena of, 488:
- contraction of field of consciousness and personality, 489–492;
- the hysterical state, 492;
- systematized dissociation, 492–504;
- systematized anesthesia, 492;
- contracted personality, 496;
- change of sentiments, 497;
- alternation of personality, 501;
- multiple personality, 502;
- amnesia, 508–517;
- subconscious traumatic memories, 517;
- mental confusion, 519–521;
- bashfulness, 520;
- self-consciousness, 521.
- suppression of instincts and affective states by, 454–458.
- Confusion (mental), as resultant of emotional conflicts, 519;
- Conservation, meaning of, 12.
- a residuum of experience, 87.
- considered as psychological residua, 110;
- as coconscious ideas, 111;
- as an undifferentiated psyche, 115;
- as physical residua, 117;
- as neural dispositions, 117.
- evidence of, furnished by automatic writing, 15;
- abstraction, 24;
- hypnosis, 31;
- hallucinatory phenomena, 39;
- dreams, 43.
- Conservation, of absent-minded acts, 50
- of forgotten artificial states, 62;
- of forgotten dreams and somnambulisms, 59.
- of forgotten experiences of normal life, 15.
- of forgotten pathological states, 68
- (amnesia, 68;
- deliria, 79;
- fugues, 75;
- intoxications, 80;
- multiple personality, 77).
- of inner life, 85.
- of subconscious perceptions, 52.
- Decerebrate Animal, behavior of, 231.
- intelligent behavior of, 240.
- Dissociation, due to conflict, 71, 469, 472–475, 480, 487, 488, 492–504.
- amnesia following, 508.
- effected by subconscious processes, 504.
- laws of cleavage of personality in, 504–508.
- systematized, 492–504;
- Dreams, as a type of hallucinatory phenomena, 222.
- physiological after-phenomena, 101.
- subconscious process underlying, 196–213.
- symbolism in, 200, 202.
- Emotion, see Affects.
- amnesia, as resultant of, 514–517.
- emergence of, from subconscious ideas, 382–386, 387–388, 391, 485.
- general psychopathology of, 440–442.
- James-Lange theory of, 423, 453.
- physiological manifestations of, 423;
- changes in circulation, 424;
- modifications of volume and action of heart, 424;
- of respiratory apparatus, 426;
- of glandular secretions, 426;
- of the functions of the digestive glands, 426;
- of the movements of the stomach and intestines, 426;
- of salivary secretion, 431;
- of secretion of ductless glands, 431;
- of pupils, 433;
- of muscular system, 433;
- the psycho-galvanic reflex, 435.
- physiological symptoms of, caused by subconscious ideas, 377–381.
- phenomena of, due to subconscious processes, 103.
- provides the impulsive force of an instinct, 447;
- one of chief functions of, 451.
- psycho-physiological schema of manifestations of emotion, 441;
- physiological mimicry of disease, 442.
- sensory accompaniments of, 453.
- Emotion, sensory disturbances caused by, 438.
- the central psychical element in an innate reflex process, 446.
- the conative function of, 451, 452–460;
- discharge of force in three directions, 452.
- Emotions, as the prime-movers of all human activity, 450;
-
- organization of, with ideas essential for self-control, etc., 451, 458.
- primary and compound, 446.
- Emotional discharge from subconscious processes, evidence for, 481.
- Emotional reactions, acquired, do not always involve subconscious processes, 418.
- Fanatics, 279.
- Fear neurosis due to subconscious ideas, 379.
- Feeling, may emerge from subconscious complexes, 383–386.
- Fixed idea (imperative), 278–279.
- Fringe (of consciousness), consideredconsidered as a subconscious zone, 338-352;
-
- as a twilight zone, 341;
- consists of definite, real elements, 342;
- ultramarginal or coconscious zone, 343–352.
- content of the, 342–352;
- only recovered by memory, 340, 353.
- effect of attention in shifting the content of focus and, 340, 353.
- Fringe (of consciousness), meaning of ideas may be in the, 352–360.
- Glycosuria, due to emotion, 432.
- Hallucinations, see Visions.
- Hysterical attacks,
- as recurrent complexes, 280, 282;
- laughter and crying due to subconscious processes, 379.
- Idea, a composite of sign and meaning, 325.
- Idea and Meaning, the problem of, 311.
- Ideas, content of, includes “Meaning,” 321-331.
- Images, of perception, either in the focus of attention or in the fringe, 330, 340.
- Images, secondary, in perception, 82–183, 313;
- Instinct and Intelligence, 240.
- Instinct, McDougall’s conception of an, 446.
- as an emotional disposition, 447, 467.
- Instinctive process, three aspects of an, 446.
- Instincts, conduct determined by, 458;
-
- difference between consequences of repression of, and of sentiments, 467–469.
- Intelligence, 240.
- and instinct, 240.
- a pragmatic question, 241.
- conscious and unconscious, 240–246.
- “Meaning,” as a part of the content of ideas, 321–331.
- as determined by a subconscious process, 361.
- as the conscious elements of a larger subconscious complex, 360–362, 363.
- derived from the setting, 321, 330.
- may be in the fringe of consciousness, 352–360, 363.
- must be in consciousness, 339.
- the problem of, 311.
- Melancholia, depressive feeling in, as emergence from a subconscious complex, 386.
- Memory, as a process, 1;
-
- of registration, conservation and reproduction, 2, 134.
- conscious, a particular type, 3;
- without recollection, 144.
- physiological, 3, 135, 229, 238.
- psycho-physiological, 138.
- significance of theory of, 257–264.
- subconscious, 84, 151, 517.
- unconscious, 137.
- Memories, automatic, 267;
- outbreak of, 274;
- as hysterical attacks, 280;
- as obsessions, 271, 278, 280;
- as a phobia, 269.
- Monism, doctrine of, 246.
Neurograms, 109, 131.
as organized systems of neurons, 121.
as physiological dispositions, 131.
as subconscious processes, 150–157.
- Obsessions, clinical characteristics of, 278.
- four types of, 373.
- type A, purely physical disturbances caused by subconscious ideas, 374–381.
- type B, emotion plus physical disturbances, 381–386;
- as “anxiety neurosis,” 382.
- type C, emotion plus physical disturbances, plus idea, 387–410.
- type D, idea, meaning, emotion and physical disturbance, 410–415.
- inability to voluntarily modify, 415.
- therapeutics of, 416.
- the setting in, 372.
- Parallelism, doctrine of, 246.
- Perception, a synthesis of primary and secondary images, 312–321.
- may include affects, 330.
- Personalities, subconscious, value of, for study of mental mechanisms, 160.
- Personality, as survival of antecedent experiences, 306–310.
- dissociated, 299–302.
- includes conserved but forgotten experiences of hypnotic states, 66.
- multiple, 299–302.
- Phobia, see Obsessions.
- as an automatism, 269.
- of steeples (case), 389–410;
- Psycho-galvanic phenomenon, induced by subconscious processes, 103.
- nature of, 435–438.
- a phenomenon of emotion, 435.
- as evidence of subconscious emotional discharge, 481–484.
- Psycholeptic attack, as an organized complex, 282.
- Psychoneuroses, symptomatic structure of, 521–528;
- the hysterical attack, 524;
- the dissociated personality, 525;
- the subconscious fixed idea, 526;
- the anxiety state, 526;
- an obsession, 527;
- an association neurosis, 527.
- Psychotherapeutics, based on organization of complexes, 288–289;
-
- by the organization of unconscious settings of ideas, 368–372, 416.
- Psychotherapeutics of obsessions, 416.
- Physiological Dispositions, innate and acquired, 230, 231.
- in the spinal animal, 231.
- in the decerebrate animal, 231.
- determinants of conscious and unconscious behavior, 230.
- Recollection, 143.
- a more perfect kind of conscious memory, 144.
- Reflection, subconscious processes underlying, 225–228.
- Religious conversion (sudden), 193, 223.
- Reproduction, dissimilarity of types in abstraction and automatic writing, 27.
- Residua, as neural dispositions, 119.
- chemical and physical theories of, 122;
- analogy with anaphylaxis, 123;
- theory of auto-catalysis, 124–127;
- of nervous accumulators, 127–129.
- Residual Processes, underlying automatic motor phenomena, 88;
- hallucinations, 90;
- post-hypnotic phenomena, 96;
- dreams, 98;
- physiological bodily disturbances, 101.
- Self-consciousness, as resultant of emotional conflict, 521.
- Sentiment, definition of a, 449;
-
- as an organized system of emotional dispositions centered about an idea, 449–450.
- difference between the consequences of repression of an instinct and of a, 467–469.
- Sentiments, essential for self-control and regulation of conduct, 451;
-
- in absence of, emotional life would be chaos, 451;
- suppression of, by conflict, 454–458.
- repression of, may lead to the formation of pathological subconscious states, 461.
- “Settings,” theory of, 311;
-
- practical application to everyday life, 331–337.
- not sharply defined groups of ideas, 421.
- as part of an unconscious complex and a subconscious process, 361, 363, 367;
- Subconscious, The, demarcation between, and the conscious, 419;
-
- difficulties of interpretation by clinical methods, 220;
- in applied psychology, 213–228.
- meanings of, 247–254;
- three classes of facts included in, 253.
- special problems of, 162.
- subdivisions of, x, 14, 253.
- Subconscious, emotional discharge shown by psycho-galvanic reaction, 481–484.
- ideas, 249–254.
- intelligence, 150, 153, 163, 164, 177–180, 187, 188;
- underlying spontaneous hallucinations, 188–195;
- underlying dreams, 196–213;
- comparable to a coconscious personality, 211–212.
- mathematical calculations, 96, 167, 169–171, 177–179.
- perception, 52.
- performance of post-hypnotic phenomena, 168, 171.
- personality, 159;
- value of, for study of mind, 159–160.
- process, definition of a, 156.
- processes, evidence for, 151, 163;
- validity of memory as evidence for, 176;
- actuality, intrinsic nature, and intelligence of, 164;
- as coconscious, 157;
- as unconscious, 161;
- conditions required for proof of, 164–166;
- as determinants of behavior, 153, 163;
- of the meanings of ideas, 361, 363;
- of physical symptoms, 377;
- intrinsic nature of, 157, 163, 164;
- underlying artificial visual hallucinations, 180–187;
- spontaneous visual hallucinations, 188–195;
- underlying dreams, 196–213.
- Subconscious self, 256.
- Symbolism, in dreams, 200, 202;
- Unconscious, The, 229;
- as a storehouse of neurograms, 149.
- as a fundamental of personality, 254–264.
- has dynamic functions, 262.
- the meanings of the, 149, 247–254.
- Unconscious, calculations, 178;
- intelligence, 187, 210–211.
- complex as the setting of ideas, 361-363.
- complexes, organization of, 265;
- ideas, 249-254.
- Will, McDougall’s theory of the, 458.
- Word-association reactions and the principle of conflict, 481.