The Springs of Human Action: A Psychological Study of the Sources, Mechanism, and Principles of Motivation in Human BehaviorD. Appleton and Company, 1927 - 501页 |
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共有 100 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第xv页
... MIND . Psychoanalysis , 290 ; The Subconscious as Source of Motivation , 294 ; The Subconscious versus the Con- scious , 299 ; Coöperation between the Conscious and the Subconscious , 301 . XVII . MOTIVES OF AUTOSUGGESTION Couéism , 303 ...
... MIND . Psychoanalysis , 290 ; The Subconscious as Source of Motivation , 294 ; The Subconscious versus the Con- scious , 299 ; Coöperation between the Conscious and the Subconscious , 301 . XVII . MOTIVES OF AUTOSUGGESTION Couéism , 303 ...
第6页
... mind is at the very same time a power of acquiring new drives ; for every mechanism , when at the stage of its ... Mind , p . 241 ; Pierce , Our Unconscious Mind , p . 231 ; Stekel , The Depths of the Soul , p . 179 . bial iceberg , the ...
... mind is at the very same time a power of acquiring new drives ; for every mechanism , when at the stage of its ... Mind , p . 241 ; Pierce , Our Unconscious Mind , p . 231 ; Stekel , The Depths of the Soul , p . 179 . bial iceberg , the ...
第10页
... mind , and all the mooted questions con- nected with it . This is not the place to discuss meta- physical problems , 20 nor even the attractive self psy- chology of Miss Calkins and others . Suffice it to say that so much of our conduct ...
... mind , and all the mooted questions con- nected with it . This is not the place to discuss meta- physical problems , 20 nor even the attractive self psy- chology of Miss Calkins and others . Suffice it to say that so much of our conduct ...
第11页
... mind will lead the person to commit the act provided there are no conflicting ideas . This is treated fully in the chap- ter on " Ideas as Motives " where its usefulness and limitations are pointed out . Here we emphasize the fact of ...
... mind will lead the person to commit the act provided there are no conflicting ideas . This is treated fully in the chap- ter on " Ideas as Motives " where its usefulness and limitations are pointed out . Here we emphasize the fact of ...
第12页
... . cit .; Allport , Social Psychology , pp . 50ff . 20 McDougall , Social Psychology , Chap . III ; Weeks , The Control of the Social Mind , p . 138 . But it is decidedly questionable to assert that all action 12 THE SPRINGS OF HUMAN ACTION.
... . cit .; Allport , Social Psychology , pp . 50ff . 20 McDougall , Social Psychology , Chap . III ; Weeks , The Control of the Social Mind , p . 138 . But it is decidedly questionable to assert that all action 12 THE SPRINGS OF HUMAN ACTION.
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常见术语和短语
abulia acquired action activity æsthetic altruism appeal appetites aroused attention attitude autonomic system autosuggestion become behavior chapter character complex compound conduct conscious coördination desire drives Dynamic Psychology effective elements Ellwood emotions experience fact factors fear feeling glands gregarious habits hate hence hypnosis Ibid idea ideal imitation important impulse impulsive drives individual inhibit innate interest Jastrow Journal of Psychology master motive McDougall means mechanism ment mental mind moral motive force native ness object one's organism pain person phase physical Pierre Janet Platonic love play pleasure prejudice primary psychic Psychoanalysis Psychological hedonism psychophysical reactions reflex reflex action regarded religion response says scious self-assertion self-regarding sentiments sensation sense significant situation social pressure Social Psychology source of motivation specific stimulus stincts subconscious suggestion sympathy temperament tendency theory thing tion tivation tive tropism true uncon unconscious Unconscious Mind urge wants whole Woodworth
热门引用章节
第65页 - Take away these instinctive dispositions with their powerful impulses, and the organism would become incapable of activity of any kind ; it would lie inert and motionless like a wonderful clockwork whose mainspring had been removed or a steam engine whose fires had been drawn.
第120页 - It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied.
第94页 - Tis the delight of children to hear tales they shiver at, and the vice of old age to abound in strange stories of times past. We come into the world wondering at everything, and when our wonder about common things is over, we seek something new to wonder at.
第287页 - If a bottle of brandy stood at one hand and the pit of hell yawned at the other, and I were convinced that I should be pushed in as sure as I took one glass, I could not refrain.
第59页 - Habits once formed perpetuate themselves, by acting unremittingly upon the native stock of activities. They stimulate, inhibit, intensify, weaken, select, concentrate and organize the latter into their own likeness. They create out of the formless void of impulses a world made in their own image. Man is a creature of habit, not of reason nor yet of instinct.
第187页 - ... and a lady-killer, as well as a philosopher; a philanthropist, statesman, warrior, and African explorer, as well as a tone-poet, and saint.
第323页 - By intuition is meant the kind of intellectual sympathy by which one places oneself within an object in order to coincide with what is unique in it and consequently inexpressible.
第347页 - Strong joy and grief depend upon the treatment this rudimentary social self receives. In the case of M. I noticed as early as the fourth month a "hurt" way of crying which seemed to indicate a sense of personal slight. It was quite different from the cry of pain or that of anger, but seemed about the same as the cry of fright. The slightest tone of reproof would produce it. On the other hand, if people took notice and laughed and encouraged, she was hilarious. At about fifteen months old she had...
第287页 - When strongly urged, by one of his friends, to leave off drinking, he said, ' Were a keg of rum in one corner of a room, and were a cannon constantly discharging balls between me and it, 1 could not refrain from passing before that cannon in order to get at the rum.
第59页 - All habits are demands for certain kinds of activity; and they constitute the self. In any intelligible sense of the word will, -they are will. They form our effective desires and they furnish us with our working capacities.