to Psychology
50 |
III. |
Types of interest in Psychical Research: the occult interest; the psychological interest; practical applications of "psychical" investigations; the explanatory interest; the investigative interest; the anthropological interest |
56 |
IV. |
The content of the problems of Psychical Research: hypnotism; subconscious activities; hallucinations; telepathy |
66 |
V. |
The tendencies of Psychical Research |
75 |
The Logic of Mental Telegraphy |
|
Introductory |
78 |
I. |
Factors of the problem: unconscious mental processes; mental community; coincidences |
79 |
II. |
The statistical nature of the inquiry; the application of theory to special cases |
83 |
III. |
Sources of error in the data |
87 |
IV. |
The source of coincidences in the subjective interest |
88 |
V. |
Résumé |
93 |
VI. |
The value of the data; coincidences; experimental evidence; assumption and logical hypothesis |
95 |
VII. |
The legitimacy of the telepathic hypothesis |
99 |
VIII. |
Logical interpretation of the evidence |
102 |
The Psychology of Deception |
|
Introductory |
106 |
I. |
The interpretative factor in perception; its relation to sense-deceptions |
106 |
II. |
The rôle of the conjurer; the comprehension of conjuring tricks dependent upon a knowledge of technical detail; illustrations; conjuring deceptions as imitations of the conditions of real experience |
111 |
III. |
The subjective factors in deception: suggestion, expectation, misdirection of the attention; the setting of a trick; illustrations |
118 |
IV. |
The subjective attitude and prepossession as a factor in deception; illustrated by the phenomena of Spiritualism; experimental proof of the influence of the belief-attitude; extreme instances of prepossession |
125 |
V. |
Mental contagion |
132 |
VI. |
Résumé; the safeguards against deception |
134 |
The Psychology of Spiritualism |
I. |
Origin of modern Spiritualism; a survey of typical manifestations; report of the Seybert Commission; reports of other observers |
137 |
II. |
The belief in Spiritualism psychologically interpreted; the technical requisites for a judgment in the matter; the investigations of Messrs. Hodgson and Davey; the psychological factors contributory to deception |
147 |
III. |
The logical status of Spiritualism |
159 |
IV. |
The source of the belief in spirit-agency; its anthropological bearings; the appeal to unfortunate predispositions; the moral aversion to Spiritualism |
166 |
Hypnotism and its Antecedents |
|
Introductory |
|