The Mind and Its Education - George Herbert Betts
day by day, and mood by mood, we build up our disposition until finally it comes to characterize us. Tempe ...
How Sentiments Develop.—Sentiments have their beginning in concrete experiences in which feeling is a predom ...
The Influence of Sentiment.—Our sentiments, like our dispositions, are not only a natural growth from the expe ...
4. PROBLEMS IN OBSERVATION AND INTROSPECTION Are you subject to the "blues," or other forms of depressed feelin ...
CHAPTER XV THE EMOTIONS Feeling and emotion are not to be looked upon as two different kinds of mental processes. ...
passing cloud falling upon the closed eyelids. The order of the entire event resulting in an emotion is as fol ...
accompanying some of our motor responses, and not others. Perceptions are crowding in upon us hour after ...
for the common run of our everyday experience; they are the common valuers of our thought and acts from hour t ...
love, or in fear, we have the impulse to do something about it. And, while it is true that emotion m ...
depths without any of these outward manifestations. Man has found it advisable as he has advanced in civilization ...
the feeling itself fades away. On the other hand, the emotions which we wish to suppress are to be refus ...
imaginary person in a book or on the stage unable to feel sympathy for the real suffering which exists ...
action and achievement. How Our Emotions Compel Us.—Love has often done in the reformation of a fallen life ...
are inclined to be too expressive emotionally? Who show too little emotional expression? How would you classify ...
CHAPTER XVI INTEREST The feeling that we call interest is so important a motive in our lives and so colors ...
interest may be looked upon as a feeling attitude which assigns our activities their place in a subjectiv ...
impulsive. It gives its possessor no opportunity for lethargic rest and quiet, but constantly urges him to ...
A twelve-year-old boy was told by his father that if he would make the body of an automobile at his ...
because he must—it makes the difference between the artist and the drudge. The drudge does only what he must ...
this at some convenient season, and finally found themselves without a taste for these things! How many of ...
«
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
»
Free download pdf