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I. |
The historical aspect of hypnotism; the point of view of modern hypnotism |
172 |
II. |
Healers of disease by mental methods; their methods; Greatrakes; Gassner |
176 |
III. |
Mesmer; the beginnings of Animal Magnetism; Mesmer's career in Paris; the Commission of 1784; decline of Mesmerism |
180 |
IV. |
The system of Animal Magnetism; its practices; a critical view |
189 |
V. |
Puységur and the discovery of artificial somnambulism; the status of Puységur; Pétetin and his contributions |
193 |
VI. |
The revival of Mesmerism; Abbé Faria; somnambulism in the hospitals of Paris; the report of the Commission of 1825; the report of the Commission of 1837 |
200 |
VII. |
James Braid; his early observations; his enunciation of the physiology of the hypnotic state; his connection with phrenology; his later views; his recognition of unconscious deception |
205 |
VIII. |
The chaotic condition of hypnotism in the middle decades of the nineteenth century; hypnotism as an anæsthetic; scientific contributions |
213 |
IX. |
Extravagances of Mesmerism; Deleuze and his followers; "electro-biology;" Harriet Martineau's letters on Mesmerism; Mesmeric miracles; Reichenbach and the "odic" force |
216 |
X. |
Transition to modern hypnotism; the scientific recognition of hypnotism; Charcot and his followers; Bernheim and the school of Nancy |
227 |
XI. |
Principles illustrated by the history of hypnotism; lack of proper conceptions; unconscious suggestion; conclusion |
231 |
The Natural History of Analogy |
I. |
The logical and psychological aspects of analogy |
236 |
II. |
Analogy and primitive mental life; illustrations; sympathetic magic based upon analogy; further illustrations |
238 |
III. |
Analogy the basis of belief in the connection between object and name; illustrations; similar relation between the object and its image, drawing, or shadow |
243 |
IV. |
Analogy and metaphor; vaguer forms of analogy |
248 |
V. |
Analogy in children |
250 |
VI. |
Analogy in superstitions and folk-lore customs; in dream-interpretation; in fortune-telling; in numbers; in folk-medicine |
252 |
VII. |
The doctrine of sympathies; of signatures; astrology; the rôle of analogy in these systems; their modern survivals |
261 |
VIII. |
Analogy as a phase in mental evolution; the transition from superstition to science; the evolution of the race and of the individual; analogy, the serious thought habit of primitive man, becomes in civilization a source of amusement; conclusion |
269 |
The Mind's Eye |
I. |
The nature of perception; its subjective and objective factors |
275 |
II. |
Illustrations of the effects of the subjective factor |
279 |
III. |
Perception as modified by attention and by the mental concept; illustrations; equivocal drawings |
282 |
IV. |
The function of the mind's eye |
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