come under the description of what has been termed double consciousness; where the mind passes by alternation from one state to another, each having the perception of external impressions and appropriate trains of thought, but not linked together by the... Medical notes and reflections - Página 169por sir Henry Holland (bart.) - 1839 - 628 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Arthur Ladbroke Wigan - 1844 - 516 páginas
...writer approached the full discovery: it requires but one more •top. and the whole is lucidly plain]; where the mind passes by alternation from one state to another, each baring the perception of external impressions [not alwa)i] and appropriate trains of thought, but not... | |
| Sir Henry Holland - 1858 - 376 páginas
...tells of no breach of continuity. If the latter explanation be admitted, then the cases just mentioned come under the description of what has been termed...by mutual memory. I have seen one or two singular examples of this kind, but none so extraordinary as have been recorded by other authors.* Their relations... | |
| Matthew J. B. Campbell, Jacqueline M. Labbe, Sally Shuttleworth - 2000 - 266 páginas
...brain as a double organ, 'the double-dealing of the mind with itself. He explored in his work what he termed 'double consciousness', 'where the mind passes...by the ordinary gradations, or by mutual memory'. 9 The phenomena of dreams, somnambulism, reverie and insanity are all referred to this disruption in... | |
| George Eliot - 2001 - 164 páginas
...that of Henry Holland, pioneer of the notion of 'double consciousness' which he defined as a state where 'the mind passes by alternation from one state...by the ordinary gradations, or by mutual memory'. 53 Eliot's treatment of Larimer's 'diseased sensibility' bears strong parallels to Holland's work,... | |
| Jane Wood - 2001 - 244 páginas
...perceptions, feelings, and volitions, the aberrations of the other. . , . The cases just mentioned come under the description of what has been termed...external impressions and appropriate trains of thought, 6¿ Henry Holland was a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, PhysicianExtraordinary to the Queen,... | |
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