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  1. 6 de dez. de 2007 · The energies of men. by. James, William, 1842-1910. Publication date. 1914. Topics. Mental healing. Publisher. New York : Moffat, Yard and Company.

  2. 10 de jun. de 2024 · William James, The Energies of Men, The Philosophical Review, Vol. 16, No. 1 (Jan., 1907), pp. 1-20

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    W ZE habitually hear much nowadays of the difference between structural and functional psychology. I am not sure that I understand the difference, but it probably has something to do with what I have privately been accustomed to distinguish as the analytical and the clinical points of view in psychological obser- vation. Professor Sanford, in a rec...

    [VOL. XVI. which the total view of his patient's life imposes on this clinical observer. They have little or nothing to do with the usual laboratory categories. Ask a scientific psychologist to predict what symptoms a patient must have when his ' supply of mental energy' diminishes, and he can utter only the word 'fatigue.' He could never predict s...

    5 ment, or some unusual idea of necessity induces us to make an extra effort of will. Excitements, ideas, and efforts, in a word, are what carry us over the dam. In those hyperesthetic conditions which chronic invalidism so often brings in its train, the dam has changed its normal place. The pain-threshold is abnormally near. The slightest function...

    [VOL. XVI. The excitements that carry us over the usually effective dam are most often the classic emotional ones, love, anger, crowd-con- tagion, or despair. Life's vicissitudes bring them in abundance. A new position of responsibility, if it do not crush a man, will often, nay, one may say, will usually, show him to be a far stronger creature tha...

    [VOL. XVI. intellectually, but has an instable nervous system, and for many years has lived in a circular process of alternate lethargy and over-animation: something like three weeks of extreme activity, and then a week of prostration in bed. An unpromising condi- tion, which the best specialists in Europe had failed to relieve; so he tried Hatha Y...

    [VOL. XVI. impressions, light, air, landscape, any kind of simplest food; and above everything in rhythmical respiration, which produces a state of mind without thought or feeling, and still very intense, inde- scribable. " These results began to be more evident in the fourth month of uninterrupted training. We felt quite happy, never tired, sleepi...

    I3 all in chosen subjects. It is, in short, dynamogenic; and the cheapest terms in which to deal with our amateur Yogi's ex- perience is to call it auto-suggestive. wrote to him that I couldn't possibly attribute any sacra- mental value to the particular Hatha Yoga processes, the pos- tures, breathings, fastings, and the like, and that they seemed ...

    [VOI,. XVI. But you are quite right that religious crises, love-crises, indig- nation-crises, may awaken in a very short time powers similar to those reached by years of patient Yoga practice. . . . The' Hindus themselves admit that Samadhi can be reached in many ways and with complete disregard of every physical training." Allowance made for every...

    I7 copious unlocking of energies by ideas, in the persons of those converts to ' New Thought,' ' Christian Science,' ' Metaphysical Healing,' or other forms of spiritual philosophy, who are so numerous among us to-day. The ideas here are healthy-minded and optimistic; and it is quite obvious that a wave of religious activity, analogous in some resp...

    [VOL. XVI. conceivable way, his life is contracted like the field of vision of an hysteric subject - but with less excuse, for the poor hysteric is diseased, while in the rest of us it is only an inveterate habit the habit of inferiority to our full self that is bad. Expressed in this vague manner, everyone must admit my thesis to be true. The term...

    I9 My fellow-pragmatist in Florence, G. Papini, has adopted a new conception of philosophy. He calls it the doctrine of action in the widest sense, the study of all human powers and means (among which latter, truths of every kind whatsoever figure, of course, in the first rank). From this point of view philosophy is a Prag- catic, comprehending, as...

  3. Physiologists say that a man is in "nutritive equilibrium" when day after day he neither gains nor loses weight. But the odd thing is that this condition may obtain on astonishingly different. amounts of food. Take a man in nutritive.

  4. The Energies of Roosevelt. Country people and city people, as a class, illustrate this difference. The rapid rate of life, the number of decisions in an hour, the many things to keep account of, in a busy city man’s or woman’s life, seem monstrous to a _ country brother. He doesn’t see how we live at all.

  5. Compre online The Energies of Men, de James, Dr William na Amazon. Frete GRÁTIS em milhares de produtos com o Amazon Prime. Encontre diversos livros escritos por James, Dr William com ótimos preços.

  6. James believed in free will and the power of the mind to affect events and determine the future. In The Will to Believe (1897) and The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), he explores...

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