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An outgrowth of the research done by members of the Harvard Affect Study Group, Human Feelings provides a comprehensive overview of the role of emotions in human life.
Contains Harold Schlosberg's "Three Dimensions of Emotion"; Roy R. Grinker's "Anxiety"; Nathaniel Kleitman's "The Role of the Cerebral Cortex in the Development and Maintenance of Consciousness"; George Robinson's "Aesthetics."
Wozniak Mind & Body: Renè Descartes to William James, pp. 17-18 & #14. A sequel to The Senses and the Intellect. The two remained the standard English psychological texts for a generation."Bain's work marked a turning point in the history of associationist psychology. Before Bain, the associationists' empiricist commitment to experience as the primary or only source of knowledge led to the neglect of movement and action in favor of the analysis of sensation. Even when motion was explicitly included in associationist accounts, as for example in the case of Thomas Brown, it was the sensory side of movement, the 'muscle sense,' rather than adaptive action that claimed attention. Bain, drawing heavily from Müller, brought the new physiology of movement into conjunction with an associationist account of mind" [Wozniak, p. 18].
The first important 19th century work on emotional expression. In his Expression of the Emotions Darwin demolished Bell's belief that emotional expression functions differently in man than in animals.
13 papers including Seymour Kety "Neurochemical Aspects of Emotional Behavior"; Joseph Brady "Endocrine and Autonomic Correlates of Emotional Behavior"; MacLean "The Limbic Brain in Relation to the Psychoses"; Lindsley "The Role of Nonspecific Reticulo-Thalamo-Cortical Systems in Emotions"; Magda Arnold "Brain Function in Emotion: A Phenomenologial Analysis".
Contains Paul MacLean's important "The Limbic System with Respect to Two Basic Life Principles"; Grastyán's "The Hippocampus and Higher Nervous Activity"; Bures's "Reversible Decortication and Behavior"; Rusinov's "Electroencephalographic Studies in Conditional Reflex Formation in Man"; and Brazier's "Impressions of the Colloquium on Electroencephalography and Higher Nervous Activity Held in Moscow, USSR, October 6 to 11, 1958".
OCLC locates 4 copies: NY Acad Med; NLM; Univ Minnesota, Univ of Queensland. Buscaino was director of the Clinic for Diseases of the Nervous System at the University of Naples. Contains chapters on the somatic expression of emotion; physiopathology of emotion; pathogenesis of psychic trauma; hysteria & trauma; classification of mental disorders; demntia praecox.
Facsimile reprint of the 1915 1st edition published by Appleton.
Crabtree Animal Magnetism, Early Hypnotism #985. Introduced the concept of unconscious cerebration in the 4th edition.
Crabtree Animal Magnetism, Early Hypnotism #985; Wozniak Mind & Body: Renè Descartes to William James #9. Classic statement of dual interactionism in the mind/body literature [See Wozniak's NLM exhibit catalog]. Carpenter Introduced the concept of unconscious cerebration in the 4th edition (1852) of the earlier incarnation of this text as the outline of psychology section in the Principles of Human Physiology.
An outstanding anthology of 24 papers covering cognitive, experimental, developmental, and affective psychology.
Sections on cognitive & perceptual disorders, disorders of affect, disorders of behavior, & psychosomatic disorders.
Contains Robert Thompson's "Centrencepahlic Theory, the General Learning System, and Subcortical Dementia"; Crinella's "Thompson, Lashley, and Spearman: Three Views of the Biological Basis of Intelligence"; Arthur R. Jensen's "Spearman's g: Links between Psychometrics and Biology"; Joseph E. LeDoux's "Emotional Memory: In Search of Systems and Synapses"; plus 7 other papers and complete bibliography of Thompson's publications.
Freeman 1142; GM 4975; Heirs of Hippocrates 1728; Osler 1574; Waller 2298; Cushing D44.
On the basis of close observation of his children and pets for many years, Darwin conclusively refuted Charles Bell's concept that the expressive muscles in man are a special endowment. "Darwin examined the causes, physiological and psychological, of all the fundamental emotions in man and animals. He concluded that 'the chief expressive actions exhibited by man and by the lower animals are now innate or inherited', and that most of the movements of expression must have been gradually acquired" [GM]. Published the year after The Descent of Man, The Expression of the Emotions in effect extended evolutionary theory to psychology. Following in Darwin's path, Romanes and Lloyd Morgan created the discipline of comparative psychology.
OCLC records only the Univ of Mich & St. Charles Borromeo Seminary with copies of this edition. An early psychosocial study based on thousands of interactions with his patients. A native of Châlon-sur-Saône, Descuret studied & practiced medicine in Paris, and later in Châtillon-d'Azergues.
Despret is in the philosophy department (service de psychologie) at the University of Liège.
Classic exposition of "amae" (indulgence) and its related vocabulary. Expressive of an emotion central to Japanese experience, "amae" refers to the indulging, passive love that surrounds and supports the individual in a group, a concept for which Western languages have no words.
A revised and expanded version of the 1997 Jean Nicod Lectures delivered in Paris.
Hunter & Macalpine p. 507 (reproducing the title-page); Wellcome III, p. 7; Blake p. 142; not in Waller (though the 1789 German translation is). The first psychiatric prize essay, awarded in 1787 the Medical Society of London's first first Fothergillian Medal. A third edition appeared in 1796.A physician of Chester & Bath, Falconer published numerous medical books ranging from an essay on the Bath waters, through books on nephritis, fevers, gout, and the influence of climate. The present work was translated the same year into French and the next year into German.
Based on lectures given in 1943-44 to the Association of Scientific Workers at Fairlie, Scotland.
Translation of Pathologie des emotions, 1892. Féré discovered the psychogalvanic reflex.
Flach's first book (by 13 years). In the 1970s he published several widely read books on depression.
Grinstein 10437; Norman Catalog F103. "An analysis of what Freud termed the three main varieties of jealousy: 'normal,' inspired by grief over losing the beloved object and the pain of the narcissistic wound; 'projection,' associated with the projection of repressed urges towards infidelity; and 'paranoid,' connected with repressed homosexuality" [Norman Catalog].
Contains papers by Pribram, Mandler, Kety, Wooley, and Schachter.
Arguably the most influential psychology book of the 20th century. Famous for the notion that repeated stimulation of specific receptors leads to the facilitation of coordinated action by an assembly of association are neurons … which form reverbertor networks, or closed systems, that may continue to fire after the cessation of the original stimulus.
No copies listed in OCLC. Collects a number of Hirose's Japanese & English journal contributions, many of which deal with psychosurgery and lobotomy. About nine papers are in English with at least that many in Japanese. Includes dozens of celebratory letters sent to Hirose from luminaries (Egas Moniz, Walter Freeman, Rylander, Sargant, etc.) and snippets from articles and books that discuss Hirose's work.Hirose, who specialized in affective and schizophrenic disorders as well as in forensic psychiatry, was associated with the Department of Neuropsychiatry at the University of Tokyo from 1941 to 1946. From 1946 to 1954 he served as the Medical Official at the Matsuzawa Mental Hospital in Tokyo and was appointed Chief Psychiatrist there in 1954. In 1960 he was appointed Professor and Director of the Department of Neuropsychiatry at Nippon Medical School in Tokyo. Along with Mizuho Nakata, Hirose introduced psychosurgery in Japan.
Hunter & Macalpine p. 335. Born in Ireland, Hutcheson was educated at Glasgow University before his return to Ireland in 1718. In the 1720s he produced four treatises that were profoundly to affect the course of British philosophy: the first two appearing in 1725 in his best known work, An Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue; the second two appearing in 1728 in the present book. The two works secured his election as Professor of Moral Philosophy in Glasgow in 1729. Hutcheson seriously influenced the ideas of Hume, with whom he correspondend in the late 1730s and 1740s. Adam Smith and Thomas Reid were both students. "In his Essay … Hutcheson refined his moral psychology. offering a kind of phenomenology of the internal modifications and the ideas they provoke. In the appended Illustrations upon the Moral Sense, he not only addressed criticism of his theory but also endeavoured to show that rival systems, like those proposed by the rationalists, depended on a moral sense for their coherence" [Dictionary of Eighteenth Century British Philosophers 1: 456].An important contribution to moral theory, supplementing the discussion of morality in his 1725 Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue. Considerably influenced the Scottish 'Common Sense' philosophers. "Hutcheson was interested in the psychological aspects of temperament and emotion and the effect of the 'Association of Ideas' in rousing and maintaining feelings, even when 'contrary to Reason', and showed that they 'were not so much in our Power, as some seem to imagine', a fact which could account for a whole range of psychological responses, from normal to pathological." [HM].
Issue devoted to Psychology. Contains Alfred Winterstein's "Zur Problematik der Einfühlung und des psychologischen Verstehens"; Gustav Bally's "Die Wahrnehmungslehre Jaenschs und ihre Beziehung zu den psychoanlytischen Problemen"; Sabina Spielrein's "Kinderzeichnungen bei offenen und geschlossenen Augen"; Yrjö Kulovesi's "Psychoanalytische bemerkungen zur James-Langeschen Affekttheorie"; Siegfried Bernfeld's "Zur Sublimierungstheorie."
Jenkins was Chief of Psychiatric Research, Psychiatry and Neurology Service, Veterans Administration, in Washington, D.C.
Kempf's first book, written while under W. A. White's influence at St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington.
Contains Paul MacLean's "Phylogenesis" (pp.16-32); G.F. Mahl's "Lexical and Linguistic Levels in the Expression of the Emotions"; Birdwhistell's "Kinesic Level in the Investigation of the Emotions"; Lacey et al's "The Visceral Level"; Pribram's "A Neuropsychological Model"; Bateson's " A Social Scientist Views the Emotions"; Engel's "Toward a Classification of Affects"; and several other papers.
Comprehensive cross-cultural study of facial expression and emotion.
Wellcome III, p 440 (this edition); Hirsch III, p. 593. The final edition of an influential period mechanist physiology and physiological psychology. Lamy was a member of the Paris Faculty of Medicine. The first part deals with sensation and the second with the passions.
The second and last of the extravagantly "sumptious" Stockdale quarto editions. Blake's friend Henry Fuseli was closely involved in the production of the English translation, who possibly arranged for the four Blake plates, which along with the George Washington portrait exist only in this and the first English edition.The foundation text for the enormously popular "science" of physiognomy (though the idea is expressed much earlier in della Porta's 1586 De humana physiognomonia), which, in turn, helped make phrenological interpretations of character seem reasonable. Lavater's work also exerted considerable influence on contemporary aesthetics and art.
So extensively rewritten and enlarged as really to constitute a new work (as Lehmann notes in the preface). We can find no record of a Danish edition for either the 1892 edition or this second edition.Originally an engineer, Lehmann was granted a second degree in 1884 for his thesis on the elementary aesthetics of colors, after which he studied for several years with Wundt. He introduced modern experimental psychology to Denmark in 1886 when he founded the world's 6th psychology laboratory in the basement of the Metropolitan School in Copenhagen, later acquired by the University of Copenhagen, where Lehmann was appointed lecturer, becoming professor extraordinarius and ultimately being offered a chair. Interested in many areas, he is also regarded as the founder of applied psychology in Denmark. His 1892 book on emotion opposed the James-Lange peripheral theory.
Originally lectures given as the Eighth Annual North Shore Hospital Lecture Series, published here as the fourth in a series of volumes directed to the medical practitioner on topics relating to the handling of emotional problems encountered in his everyday practice.
Crabtree Animal Magnetism, Early Hypnotism #1178 (1st edition).
A neglected but important attempt to assess the effects of a number of drugs on several hypnotized female subjects by one of the leading lights of French neurology. Luys discusses the transmission of emotion from one hypnotized person to another. "One of the interesting outcomes of his experimentation was his development of a unique version of the notion of 'doubling of the personality.' In Luys' view, in the doubled personality opposite emotions resided in the left and right halves of the body" [Crabtree].
Section 2: Emotion & Affect (M-Z)
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