Alfred T. Schofield - The Unconscious Mind (1901)
Alfred T. Schofield - The Unconscious Mind (1901)
Alfred T. Schofield - The Unconscious Mind (1901)
R. Troth,
EDICJtL BOOKS.
Denver,
ISIS Stout Sreet Colo.
RARY ORNIA
LOSANGHl-S
AoKifia^eTe to koKov
KaTe^re!
CORTEX
ATI
_0_
u
Conscious
Front
-3
>
u p*ntj iiagnunmatU. No tut* lUfinti Cntrti tr Ant hart bun at ftl itmonttrttUt
Ttiit
l 1*1 Brain.
from sensory ner*e current proceeding and the Skin, etc., enters the Spinal Cord, at 1, Ming may be changed into motion the to a Spinal Befiex; or it may proceed
and to the Basal Ganglia by the Short Circuit, an be changed into motion at 3, being
;
Medulla and be changed into motion at 2, or it may proceed being a Hatuial Reflex
;
sciousness,
or it may proceed to^the Acquired Seflex into ConCortex by the Long Arc nse and there be changed at *, Voluntary Aotton. This last u the
Spina/
fief/exes
r
I
^he Unconscious
Mind
Character"
LAFAYETTE PLACE
1901
CONTENTS
PA.OK
INTRODUCTORY
..
...
ix
CHAPTER
On Mind below Man
...
I.
CHAPTER
The Scope op Mind
in
II.
Man
...
...
...
...
...
24
CHAPTER
The Conscious Mind
III.
...
62
CHAPTER
The Unconscious Mind
...
IV.
...
...
72
CHAPTER
V.
...
98
CHAPTER
Unconscious Mind and Habit
VI.
...
...
...
...
121
viii
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
VII.
Max
The Unconscious Mind and
0LEI..F
its
Qualities
Memory
and
m
IxD
CHAPTER
The Unconscious Mind
in
VIII.
th% Child
169
CHAPTER
IX.
...
...
187
CHAPTER
The Unconscious Mind and
its
X.
...
Detailed Education
210
CHAPTER
XI.
... ...
...
...
237
CHAPTER
XII.
...
...
252
CHAPTER
XIII.
266
CHAPTER
XIV.
II.
Hearing, etc.
284
CONTENTS
CHAPTER XV.
ix
PAGE
...
...
294
CHAPTER
The Unconscious Mind and
Skin, Stomach; and in
its
XVI.
CHAPTER XVH.
The Unconscious Mind and Disease
...
...
...
325
CHAPTER
XVIII.
I.
...
...
...
352
CHAPTER
XIX.
II.
,
...
374
CHAPTER XX.
The Value of the Unconscious Mind
...
...
...
...
402
"
...
419
Index
*.___.....
425
INTRODUCTORY
work is to establish the fact of an unconscious mind in man, and to trace in brief some of its powers and the various ways
object of this
in
The
show that
of
We
the source of
conduct, of instinct, of tact, and the thousand the home qualities that make us what we are
;
of
all
memory, the ultimate governor and ruler of actions and functions of the body, and
in every
factor
in
our
psychical
An
attempt will be
first
thing of the
dawn
of
and deepen the radical conception of the mean" mind " as applied to man, so ing of the word
as definitely to include all unconscious psychic
powers.
We
shall
what
so long
it
it is
and what
xii
INTRODUCTORY
not
;
is
scious and
and then turn our attention to the unconshow that it is probably the greater
part of mind, consciousness being but the illuminated disc on which attention is riveted on
account of
its
whereas we
shall
if
it
deeper,
shades
wider,
and
truer.
We
shall
conscious with the conscious, and the bearings of the one on the other and shall next speak of unconscious mind and habit and its formation,
;
the various qualities of the unconscious mind, and its action in memory and in sleep and then
;
we must
consider the great question of the education of the unconscious mind in man, and
education and
formation of character in children must inevitably be based upon it and not on the conscious and that the value of the ultimate man or woman
;
then touch briefly-upon the connection of the unconscious mind with sensation, and
shall
its
We
body
generally,
and then
in de-
tail
INTRODUCTORY
xiii
and organs of the body, including the question of sex and reproduction; and lastly, we must look somewhat carefully at it as a great power in disease and as a great agent in therapeutics, touching here on the question of faith and mind healing so closely connected with it, and concluding this monograph with a summary of its powers as established by evidence and observation.
book written and instituted? the answer is why this this inquiry 1 " book First of all, on account of written. two-fold.
If
it is
asked,
why
is
this
is
the great bearing of the question on many different branches of scientific research that are of
practical interest.
As
is
the key-stone of the arch, which supports the sciences of philosophy, metaphysics and psychology.
Its enlarged conception as here attempted has a most practical bearing on at least two other great sciences with which the whole wel-
fare of the
race
is
bound up
the science of
xiv
INTRODUCTORY
education and child training for the formation of character, and the science of therapeutics.
Those who have the patience to read the pages which follow will naturally whyuot J ask why J a
written
before.
momentous should have been so little discussed, and treated hitherto as of such small importance. The answer
subject
so
great and
so
So many psychologists the of the high priests religion of mind being committed so generally to deny and refuse any exappears to be this
:
tension of
it
"a
sly
glance" at the forbidden fruit, consistently ignore the existence of the Unconscious, their pupils while the naturally treading in their steps
;
physician of the period, revelling in the multiplication and elaboration of physical methods of diagnosis and experiment, is led to despise and
" contemptuously set aside as only fancy those psychical agencies which can cure, if they cannot
"
diagnose.
It
may be
asked,
why was
not an attempt
Previous
attempts.
made determinedly
since then
in
years ago in
INTRODUCTORY
xv
honour, undeterred by ridicule and contempt, made noble and partially successful efforts to But it is only now that the establish the truth.
pendulum
istic side
Huxley and Tyndall and others, whose great works on this side led all men for a time to forwas another has begun to get almost that there
of
now open
to
and
they are supported as they now are from the other side by the best physiologists.
especially
when
has,
we
trust, arrived
lasting
with the result that psychology will be rescued from the contempt into which it
basis,
has fallen at the centres of learning, a contempt obsolete shibreally due to adherence to an
boleth
more and gives due value to the psychical factor in disease and cure for the first time while child culture will no longer remain the hap-hazard, capricious and contradictory task it has been,
;
governed mainly by the maternal rule of thumb, but a reasonable and natural science, as it re-
xvi
INTRODUCTORY
cognises what it is that has to be trained, and the methods given us for its accomplishment.
The
last
question that will be asked is why the author, a medical man, undertakes
all this.
The importance
read, for
it
of this ques-
tion will
sink to insignificance
will
when
is
it
then be seen
how
has been sought to establish every point and every statement on the authority of others, with the effect that the book welllaboriously
little
nigh appears to be
of extracts.
more than a
collection
authority.
He
has been but the agent to collect and arrange the facts here given in an intelligible sequence, and
he has been driven to this task from the simple fact that, being a physician in constant contact
with nerve diseases and mental phenomena, he saw, for many years, the manifestation of uncon-
powers he was forced to recognise as mental, and yet frequently he found the statement that they were so was received with doubt
scious
and
ridicule.
He was
of
further
scious
study
the
phenomena
of
uncon-
mind and
and kindred
INTRODUCTORY
xvii
found the whole subject in chaos, vigorously denied and scouted on the one hand, gravely
asserted and, as
the other.
it
After
much
came
might be some slight service to his day and generation if he wrote a brief review of the entire subject in, as far as
to the conclusion that
possible, other
his
and more
scientific
language than
men, especially in his own profession, the question as to whether this was not indeed
practical
and, above
all,
to the production of
some
work on the
Westbourne Terrace,
W., 1898.
Hyde Park,
CHAPTEE
A
cleae concept
-
I.
physiologico psychical education, and also its issues on every life more of particularly on those stage
earlier periods
concept of mind.
when
the character
is
formed.
It is not
too
much
to
culture
must
say that true education or true childbe based on a full and broad concept of
And this is becoming of increasing importance from the great interest that is being taken in the
mind.
development of children. There can be no doubt that amongst psychologists The causal the concept is changing and enlarging.
force at
"
work
new"
is
present largely German, where the " " perhaps accepted as the true with a greater
is at
facility
their
national
than with English scientists, who carry all stolidity and doggedness into their
studies,
and still move on stereotyped lines with proper reverence for established authority. Investigations and inferences are more boldly pushed
and more rapidly made abroad, and perhaps not unfrequently supplemented by that inner consciousness whose dicta are alike incapable of verification or proof.
1
We
have, however, in England, notable exceptions to the rule of " follow-my-leader," whom we shall often quote, but whom at present it is needless to name.
Historically, distinguished
time to
time striven to enlarge our concept, but with indifferent success, from the want of support from the physio-
which only of late years has made much advance, and on which all future psychology must be increasingly based. A decided impetus, from an
logical side,
phenomena
laid bare
by hypnotism,
significant that all modern psychofeel constrained seriously to discuss and examine logists these manifestations.
and
it is
somewhat
At the same time, deliberate efforts have not been wanting to check and ridicule all concepts of mind that
new wine
exceeded the old time-honoured definitions, lest the should burst the old bottles while many
;
physiologists, so far from extending our horizon, have sought gradually to limit all idea of mind to a function
Thus, while there is generally a consent to extend our ideas in many quarters, they are limited in
of matter.
others, either
by
flat
or by physiological materialism
both, though
kind,
off-
the
Without further
preface, therefore,
we
will proceed
Such
difficulties,
of knowledge, navigators, when exploring the stream care at the outset not T> we must take especial r
Relations
of
to
do more than survey at a distance those numerous rocks which project from either
mind and
matter.
bank, on which
we might
from
the temptation to exceed our limitations. For instance, are the psychical and the physical the
two Cartesian
clocks,
tick for tick ? This up, nevertheless correspond He says Browne. Crichton position is well stated by " These mental actions are incorrectly spoken of as the functions of the brain, for they certainly cannot hold
wound
the same relation to that organ that movement does to the muscles, or bile to the liver. Nothing can be
derived from motion but another motion, nothing from
mental process but another mental process and thus the facts of consciousness can never be explained by
;
molecular changes in the brain, and all that we can do is to fall back on an hypothesis of psycho-physical concomitant variations in parallelism, which assumes
brain and mind.
There
is
known
we
live
have our being. We may picture these to ourselves as circles which impinge on each other at the first moment of conscious existence, which intersect more
and more as
goes on, their largest intersection reached (including but a small segment of each) being when life is at its full, which then withdraw from each
life
company
at death.
But whatever image we may adopt we must hold fast to the truth that mind and matter are distinct essences,
irreconcilable
in
their
nature,
;
though
mysteriously
ary processes of mind, made up of sensory and motor elements, has correspondence with physical changes in 1 Or shall we follow Prothe brain been traced out."
fessor
W.
"
:
radical conception
may be uniformly and absolutely a function of " 2 brain action as effect to cause ?
action " is the ' " This working conception," he continues, all underlies the which 'physiological hypothesis' psychology of recent years." To adopt one theory is
'
to adopt the other, a be proclaimed a dualist monist, and the former position is certainly to be to
; ,
preferred of the two but neither contains the whole of the truth, though each contains a part.
;
For instance, the abysmal distance between mind and " matter is shown in that, while physical
between
mind and
...
only,"
grasp that mind extension in space, having no relation with it that we know of. It does not cover a surface or fill a volume.
is
In this we follow, of course, the popular assumption that time and space are essentiIt is only related to time.
1
Sir J. C.
2
8
W.
James
Human Mind,
p. 7.
The extent
matter
is
of the connection
still
indeed
unknown, though
psychical
has furnished
like
Some,
it
Proin
make
action
universal
to
man
only,
:
while Schopenhauer, from a broader standpoint, says " The materialists endeavour to show that all mental
are physical, and rightly so, only they do not see that, on the other hand, every physical is at the
phenomena
".
we
we
material universe
may
be, after
all,
but an
e"s e n e
thln g 3 -
mind
may
view a projection
not be two, but one, the former being in this of the latter, rather than the latter
"
The common supposition, Professor Herbert says then, that the material universe and the conscious
:
beings around us are directly and indubitably known, and constitute a world of positive fact, in which
'
'
reason can certainly pronounce without any exercise of faith ... is an entire mistake, based upon astonishing
ignorance of the essential limitations of human knowledge, of which thinkers who lived in the very dawn of
philosophy were perfectly aware. The fact is, we are equally obliged to transcend phenomena, and to put
faith in events
which do not
appear, recognise the past, or the distant, or the material universe, or the minds of men, as when we
infer the existence of
when we
God and
mind
of the
unseen world
.'
That
Life
life
involves
and
nnnd.
com,
"
is
been vigorously disputed and equally vigor" Life," says Professor Basis
combining power.
It is
the product and presence of mind." 2 No mechanical process can indeed ever adequately represent or account for the processes of life, and yet life is not in
itself
a force
it is
ends.
The
mind
"
may
be em-
ployed as the inherent cause of purposive movements in organisms is a very difficult question to solve.
There can be no doubt that the actual agents in such movements are the natural forces, but behind these the directing and starting power seems to be psychic.
"
From
the
first
in the
cell-
when
the primordial
into
germ
of
being,
the
entire individual
human
destiny.
From
the
never for
the essential work of our present existence." Again, " one cannot forbear assuming in the vital process of each individual organism, an idea which continually
1
Prof. Herbert, Realistic Assumptions of Modern Science Prof. Bascom, Comparative Psychology, p. 58.
Examined,
p. 455.
Carpenter goes
further
still.
"
The
and correlation
of that
of these
with the
vital
nexus between mental and bodily activity which cannot be analysed, all leads upwards towards one and
the
same conclusion
the
source of all
is
power
is
mind.
And
cell action to mind, athave been made recently tempts definitely to vital ceil indicate the exact location, if not of mind, actlon which has no space-extension, at any rate of its
-
general idea undoubtedly is that the " The sphere of psychic action in cells is the nucleus. seat of consciousness, or at least of mind, is the
activity.
The
nuclear plasm,
the chromatic granules are endowed with psychic power." " The brain or soul of the cell is the chromatin, as is now widely believed
i.e.,
among
cytologists.
In
it
hereditary powers, and if it rest of the protoplasm behaves automatically. The cell moves mechanically, cannot reconstruct itself, and
finally
Chromatin has
the power of interpreting stimuli, and its reactions are intelligently directed towards the preservation of
its
1
own
life."
Chromatin or chromoplasm
is
the
F. Kirch ener, Psychology, p. 141. 2 W. B. Carpenter, Mental Physiology, 4th edition. 3 Prof. Nelson in American Journal of Psychology, vol. iii., p. 369. also Griiben, Beitrdgen von Kanntniss den Physiologie und Biologic
See
den
Protozoal,
vol.
i.
den Lebenzellen.
This action
The mind
in
**>
apparently inherent, and in virtue of every organic being has the appearance of
is
;
protoplasm.
self- constructed there being an innot for only dwelling power, purposive action in each cell, but for endless combinations of cell activities for
De mg
common
ends not at
all
cell,
completed organism.
empirically," says Schopenhauer, "every being stands before itself as its own handiwork." "But " is not the language of Nature," he adds, understood, because it is too simple."
It
"Even
would appear thus we cannot define where psychic however far we travel down in the
psychic action
is
Maudsley remarks, we certainly cannot venture to set bounds to its power over those intricate invisible molecular movements which are the basis of all our visible bodily functions. There are many more things in the reciprocal action of mind and organic eleas
we
seen. "
"Entirely ignorant
are,"
ments than are yet dreamt of in our philosophy." " Unconscious processes of knowledge," says Soury,
"
are
human
understanding. the psychological powers, in their most elementary forms, must be studied in the molecular movement of
particles
of
1
protoplasm
Maudsley,
...
all
psychical
vol. L, p. 39.
processes
Mind and
Body,
9
of
phenomena
molecular
mechanisms."
"
(or protoplasmic) irritability,
but have every appearance of choice, "the nucleus 2 All being the focal seat of life in all its forms".
attempts of
these
lar
mechanical or
chemical explanation of
movements
The
entire cellu-
body embodies in itself all the functions that, in consequence of an ulterior division of labour amongst have been assigned to distinct pleuri-cellular organs,
elements.
Descartes, on the other hand, as G. H.
3
Lewes
points
Animals
not mere mechanisms.
many
others consider
all
vital
,
phenomena
i-i
consciousness as a proof of the presence of mind. He " Two conditions require to be satisfied before we says even begin to imagine that observed activities are an
:
indication of mind.
"
They must be displayed by a living organism. "2. They must be of a kind to suggest the presence
1.
of
elements which
we
as
characters of
choice."
4
mind
We trust, however, to be
1 1
able to
show
that consciousRevue
Jules Soury on the "Physiological Psychology of the Protozon," in PhUnsophique, January, 1891. 2 Binet, "Psychic Life of Micro-organisms," Mind, vol. xiv., p. 454.
G. H. Lewes, Studies in Psychology, 'G. Romanes, Animal Intelligence p.
,
p. 23.
2.
10
not an essential quality of mind, and certainly these lower organisms the mechanical theory among does not cover the ground even when consciousness
ness
cannot be assumed.
"
The conception
"
of mechanism," as
;
Von Hartmann
says,
of the
mechanism, when
it
exists,
thing over to be performed by psychic action. Moreover, the fitness of the mechanism includes the fitness
of its origin, of the soul."
1
and
this again
The unity and connections of the organism cannot be in the individual substance or processes, but only in the power that harmonises them. Whether this vital
power be
is
"
as
little
mechanical and
"Mind
animal
[a
may
;
all
life
and we may
embryo-cell, determining development." " It is a psychical power which, aided by the Again unconscious representation of the type and the means
:
its
end
of self-preservation, brings
about
these circumstances, in consequence of which the perpetuation of the normal condition must ensue according
to general physical
J
In every dis-
Ed.
2
3
v. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. L, p. 199. Kirchener, Psychology, p. 142. Prof. Barker (New York), Formation of Habit in Man, p. 34, Victoria
Institute.
11
turbance this process occurs unless the power of the unconscious will in mastering its circumstances is too
small, so that the
abnormality or death. " The Cartesian doctrine that animals are walking automata, which merely ape us with the semblance
of a psychical life, is looked upon to-day by every feeling man as an almost revolting error. How long will it be before our modern physiologists finally free themselves from the not smaller error in principle that the
of the
organic manifestations of life of the lower central organs nervous system are mere mechanical contrivances
life ?
"
W. H.
Thompson, r "Mind" iu " The amoeba presents active and unicellular organism. spontaneous movements, and here one not
says
:
only meets with a power of choice, but also an gent consciousness in selecting food ".
intelli-
Maudsley observes:
"An
it what you will) of and eschewing what is hurtful to it, as well as of 3 feeling and ensuring what is beneficial to it ". Perhaps one instance of this may be given. Eomanes
power
(call
it
intelligence or call
feeling
observes
"
:
No
of certain infusoria
to believe
that these
little
amount
*Ed.
of intelligence.
v.
There
is
a rotifer
whose body
iii.
,
"-/!>;,/., 3
p. 149.
Maudsley,
vol.
i.,
p. 7.
12
is of
a cup shape, provided with a very active tail armed with strong forceps. I have seen a small specimen of this rotifer attach itself to a much larger one with its
forceps, the large rotifer at once
its
It took firm hold of the weed with its and forceps, began a most extraordinary series of movements to rid itself of the encumbrance. It dashed from side to side in all directions but not less sur-
own
prising was the tenacity with which the smaller rotifer retained its hold, although one might think it was being
almost jerked to pieces. This lasted several minutes, till eventually the small rotifer was thrown violently
It then returned to the conflict, but did not away. succeed a second time in establishing its hold. The
entire scene
was
we were
to depend upon appearances alone, this one observation would be sufficient to induce one to impute
conscious determination to these micro-organisms." x "Wonderful is the instinct of the holothuriae which
live in
the Philippine Islands of the South Sea. These and if they be taken away from
;
own
new
2
whole
more
in
altered media."
:
"An
amoeba shows
p. 140.
voli-
G. Romanes, Animal Intelligence, p. 18. Ed. v. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol.
iii.,
13
and passion.
as
One
its
it,
trying to swallow a
one-celled plant
long as
extent trying to envelop the plant. It failed again and again, but repeated the attempt until at length,
convinced of
made
"
it
off in
its hopelessness, it flung itself away, and search of something more manageable."
There
is
knows it or not, does not, in so far as it lives and moves and keeps up its being, exhibits the fundamental Instinct means organic experience, quality of reason.
while reason
creature
is is
instinct in the
making.
An
instinctive
hence
strongly such illustrations as these prove the presence of psychic force, all may not be agreed as
to the question of consciousness.
However
By some it
is
assumed,
as we have
2
Pfliiger
said, to
accompany
all
ever obscure,
animals
vanes
them
ii
action
.I
s there constious-
ness.
the greater
ceeds, "every cell purposive work guided by some faint glimmer of consciousness is a question not to be answered." Hart-
mann
"
says
The
central consciousness
vol. xii., p. 512.
is
by no means
Maudsley, Mind,
Pfliiger, Teleological
Mechanism of Life,
14
nerve-centres
vaguer description following from the continuity of the animal series." * Professor Schmidt boldly states that
unconscious mind
is
and self-consciousness
man.
Fechner, Schopenhauer,
others also speak of the
many
seems a
little
startling
pressed, but, on the other hand, we think it must be admitted in all animals. " The first acts of life, Dr. Noah Porter says
:
whether they pertain to body or soul, are unconscious," 2 " Reflex action is the and when Herbert Spencer says
:
lowest form of psychical life," 3 he thereby tacitly admits unconscious mind-action in animals.
When we
instinct
and
^ on
niteiiigence.
telligence
w ^h
the inscrutable problem of the connection of the two, and the origin of the former.
4th May, 1889, an account is given of the "formation d'un instinct," to the effect that every evening for ten years (beyond which the
In the Bevue
Scientifique,
narrator's
go)
a flock of geese
manifested wild terror at a place and twilight hour coincident with a murderous attack that had once been
1
2
3
Ed. Dr.
v.
Hartmann, Philosophy of
Porter, The
Noah
Herbert Spencer,
the. Unconscious, vol. i., p. 60. Intellect, p. 100. vol. L, p. 428. Principles of Psychology,
Human
15
dogs, although
all
the older
members
had been killed off every year for market. Consider an illustration given us by Romanes from a class by no means renowned for instinct or for in"
telligence.
Sticklebacks
swim
rapacious pike which do not attempt to attack them for if by oversight a pike even actually attempts to swallow a stickleback, the latter with its projecting
dorsal spines sticks in his throat and the pike must die of and infallibly hunger, accordingly cannot transmit his painful experience to posterity." 1
;
summed up by
following
Professor
Inst i ncts
Lindsay
in
:
phenomena
1.
the
2
fifteen
ofinsects -
psychic
2. 3. 4.
5.
6.
Co-operation for a given purpose. Division of labour, working by turns, and relief parties. Obedience to authority, including language of command. Understanding a language (often of touch). Organisation of ranks and military discipline.
Knowledge
of possession of
of it; sub-
10.
11. 12. 13.
Forethought, real or apparent. Practice of agriculture, havest and storage. Respect for and interment of dead.
in bereavement, or its resemblance. Funeral ceremonies, including processions. Use of natural tools, instruments and weapons.
Mourning
14. 15.
Imagination and
1
its
derangement by hypnotism.
Intelligence, p. 99.
vi.
Romanes, Animal
Lindsay,
Mind
in Animals, chap.
16
phenomena
of instinct
and
instinct and
intelligence,
now
u
intelligence?
Eomanes
asks,
they speak to ug of a lapged intelligence that, having by long use formed all needed habits, has ceased to act when these have been crystallised into
instinct?"
Do
"This question," he
says, "is
unanswer-
however, been vigorously answered by Professor H. W. Parker of New York. " I would protest that instincts,
able in our present state of knowledge."
It has,
spoken of doubtfully as voluntarily acquired habits, or, as Eomanes suggests, speaking to us of lapsed intelli'
gence,' offer
no evidence
of so originating."
"
It
seems
that the fatal lack of proof of any such origin, and the impossibility of it in the light of both mental
to
me
and
biological science,
is
just
ledge gives!"
difficulty.
Maudsley's suggestion
says
:
helpful in the
He
"It
is
tion,
fundamental
ideas,
mental aptitudes,
have
not been acquired by experience, not of the individual, but of the race". Darwin's view is that instinct began in chance acts
favourable to the perpetuation of species though this and all solutions besides hereditary transmission hardly
;
fish.
We
will give
touched with acetic acid the thigh of a deIt wiped it off with the foot of the capitated frog. same side. He then cut off the foot and re-applied the
Pfliiger
acid.
The
it
off
could not.
After
some
fruitless
17
seemed unquiet, and at last made use of the foot of the other leg and wiped off the acid. 1
The regard to this, Von Hartmann remarks make a to movecauses the beheaded frog physiologist
With
"
ment
of contraction
and thereby obtains evidence that action rests on a mechanism and the
;
psychologist sees the reflex act and has a conviction that reflexion is a psychical process in which volition
2 uniformly follows on sensation ". " Du Bois Kaymond says With awe and with wonder must the student of nature regard that micro:
which
is
the seat of
the laborious, constructive, orderly, loyal, and dauntless " soul of the ant Huber says " On the visit of an overseer ant to the
! :
works where the labourers had begun the roof illustrations otlustmct too soon, he examined it and had it taken down, the wall raised to the proper height, and a new
-
ceiling constructed
Romanes shows
for their
young which they paralyse but do not kill. Crickets have three nerv'e motor centres to be paralysed; one behind the neck, which has to be stretched to get at
it,
all
He adthese are unerringly punctured by the wasp. " duces this as a specimen of supposed lapsed intelligence".
it,
so bit one
Maudsley, Physiology of the Mind, p. 138. Ed. v. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious,
vol.
UL, p. 226.
1%
of its legs,
fly
stooped
its
head to
it.
its leg, at
once secured
Birds go through elaborate dramatic performances when their nests are approached, and insects often simulate death.
Some jackdaws
window
sill
on a sloping
all
slipped
down, so in
sticks resting
on a step
to the
sill
Von Hartmann gives the following, which has how" The cuckoo lays eggs ever, we believe, been queried.
in colour
and marking resembling the other eggs in the It may be thought this is because the (strange) nest. cuckoo sees the other eg_;s, but the explanation does
{e.g.,
In
in.
nor look
it
must even
It
side
and put
conceive by
look.
its
sense
how
ance."
These
instinctive
instances
suffice
to
show,
of
centres exist,
how much
the
the actions
results
resemble
when no
is
so in higher
animals.
1
Ed.
v.
vol.
iii.
p. 106.
19
is usually a slow proover countless generations, instinctive but here also the same causes, inter alia, of colour 3
may
be at work.
aI)dform -
Thus the beautiful experiments of Mr. Ponlton, F.E.S., have shown that certain caterpillars can more than once in their lifetime change
do sometimes occur.
their colour to suit their surroundings. Thus, if one half of a set of certain green caterpillars have black
and
twigs placed among the leaves on which they feed, if the other half have some white paper spills
placed
among
the
leaves,
most
of
the
former will
The nervous
stimulus which produces these different pigmentary deposits appears to be excited by the particular colour
But through acting upon the surface of the skin. what wonder-working power is the change brought
about?
Not, of course, through any conscious action of the caterpillar, for the pupae of these same cater-
change, changing even to a a brilliant metallic lustre, with golden appearance, when the chrysalis has been formed and allowed to
pillars
undergo a
like
remain on
gilt
paper
Does
possibly
it
colour-changes,
and
certain
changes in the animal kingdom, the cause of which is still obscure, may possibly be reflex actions excited
l by a suggestion derived from the environment ? "We find still more remarkable instances of natural
"
instinct given
1
by
Drummond
in his
work on African
1 895.
Humanitarian,
20
Natural History.
We
so
see
brown
by the
or
butterfly,
like
when
;
when warned,
deceived
or the
the
Pyrops
tenebrosus,
;
exactly
resembling
the
or
the
precisely imitates the bark of the trunk on which it or the resides, thus escaping all its keen enemies
;
Eunomys
tillaria,
is
beguiled.
"
:
Instinct," says
;
regards instinct as compound reflex action, Reflexes and instincts the precursor of intelligence. traits are inherited mental reason is acquired and is
;
now
heritable."
all
in
which there
is
psychical striving towards the preservation of the species without consciousness of the end of this striving." 3
of
mental evolution in
On
we bave
;
on the twenty-second the by similarity " " on the twenty-fourth, higher Crustacea, with reason " communication of ideas"; on the hymenoptera, with
;
2
3
Reid, Present Evolution of Man. Prof. Schneider, Mind, vol. viii., p. 128. Dr. Noah Porter, JJuman Intellect, p. 176.
21
on the twenty-eighth, ape and dog, with "indefinite morality". Abstraction begins just below the twenty-seventh, generalisation at the twenty-ninth,
and and
of
these
implied in the twenty-first, if that be a noting notion of qualities by comparison, in other words,
by abstracting these. " There is not," says Maudsley, " a single mental quality which man possesses, even to his moral feeling,
that
we do
full dis-
play in
animals.
Memory,
1
attention,
apprehension,
We
that
is
also
get
a
is
animals which
must be given. My own dog, a Borzoi, was brought from Shoeburyness to my house in Westbourne Terrace near Hyde Park, and kept there two or three days. He was then taken down by my coachman to Hanwell by train, and chained in a yard. Next day he broke loose and came straight back to the Terrace, never-having travelled the road or district except when he went down by train. Of course such stories are innumerable. We will give
dog
stories here, but
one illustration
an amazing instance of animal intelligence from an account of the elephant in the Lao
_
Intelligence
in higher
animals.
States of Northern
Siam engaged
in timber
p. 512.
82
" Other elephants actually feed the circular saws in the mill, and so marvellous is their intelligence that an astute little tusker was observed to cease the pressure
on his log, withdraw it anxiously, and then offer another part to the revolving saw, which was formerly going crookedly through the log.
We
conveys exactly what we mean. at the sound of the dinner bell the that assured are
sawmill elephants will instantly drop their logs and scamper off, screaming with glee at the welcome respite.
They
which
they consider too heavy, but if the mahout insists they may possibly call one of their mates to lend a hand
'
'.
"
The
stacking of the
interesting to witness.
An
log near the stack, and is He finds he has not brought it on top.
wonderfully squared logs elephant has brought his picking up one end to place
it
is
enough, however. he requires no orders from the foreman above him. He He walks round calculates the distance with his eye. and tusks his trunk to the end of the log, applies
thereto, "
1
and gives a mighty push. Once more he goes back to judge the
right.'
distance.
on the next places one end stack, and then goes to the other end on the ground. This, too, is lifted and the whole log pushed home
Just
of his log
He
triumphantly.
"
heavy trailing chain is sometimes fixed to eleat phants that are turned loose to feed in the jungle
23
night this is in order that wanderers may be traced by the trail left by the chain in the jungle. Well, it has been known that when an elephant has made
'
up
his
mind
'
tell-tale
We
meet
this
all difficulties
with
iS
which
amazing
i nst i nc t
may
pS y
X
-
cious
act,on
is
unconscious psychic
"As
in
human
"we
same action, unconscious and yet whose consequence is indeed much more purposive,
find in instinct the
human
ideation."
"
Hartmann defines instinct as Purposive action without consciousness of the purpose". 2 He points out, too, in the spirit of philosophical poetry, its sexual
character as follows, in a statement that,
we
fear, rests
of
fact,
is
modern development
of
woman
rapidly rendering
" Woman is related to man as inwholly untrue. stinctive or unconscious to rational and conscious
Therefore the genuine woman is a piece of action. nature on whose bosom the man estranged from the
unconscious
may
respect for the deepest, purest spring of all life!" choice example of German mystic sentimentalism
xi., p. 79.
CHAPTEB
Leaving now
II.
us pause for one moment to consider the present position of the science known as psychology to our subject.
The^wqrd "psychology" is itself comparatively a new word. In the seventeenth century the what is
was always called " metaphysics," and no other word is used by Descartes, Malebranche and Leibnitz. The word " psychology " was really invented by an obscure writer called Goelemus. Its definition given by Professor Ladd and quoted by Professor James is " the description and explanation
psychology.
sc i ence
of states of consciousness as
it
such
",
"
In this definition
assumes, as true, two peculiar data (1) Thoughts and feelings or whatever other names transitory states of
:
consciousness
may
be
known
by.
(2)
Knowledge, by
is
these states of consciousness of other things." 2 The trouble is that these data on which all
are not themselves secure.
"
built
Every one assumes that we have direct introspective acquaintance with our
thinking activity as such.
1
.
W.
James, Psychology,
p. 1.
Ibid., p. 2.
(24)
IN
MAN
25
part I cannot feel sure of this conclusion. . . . It seems as if consciousness as an inner activity were
my
rather a postulate than a sensibly given fact, the postulate, viz., of a knoiver as correlative to all the known.
. . .
science
When, then, we talk of 'psychology as a natural we must not assume that that means a sort of
'
l psychology that stands at last on solid ground." Professor Ed. Montgomery goes even further; con" demning, in toto, Ladd's definition of the word. Psy-
chology as a science of self-originated and self-acting conscious existence rests on eminently fictitious as-
sumptions and can only lead to nihilistic results. Such a science, constructed without reference to an abiding
extra-conscious source of actuation
and emanation,
will
end in vacancy;
2
our
own
conscious
So impressed have some psychologists been with the inspiration of unconsciousness in their explanation of the mental phenomena, that but for their acceptance
psychology as the science of the facts of consciousness it seems to me they could hardly have fallen, as they have done, into the contradictions
this question."
Psychology
indeed (until
lately), so fettered
and
bound by
arbitrary limitations in the discussion of states of consciousness that it is thus described (or
its
W.
2
s
James, Psychology, p. 467. Ed. Montgomery, Mind, vol. xiv., p. 499. G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, third
series, p. 160.
26
decried)
its present condition.
"
sation on the
that
tions
we
descriptive level, a strong prejudice have states of mind, and that our brain condi;
mere
but not a single law in the sense in which is in physics shows us laws. At present, psychology the laws of and Galileo before of condition the physics
them
1 motion, or of chemistry before Lavoisier." " have purposely paused over this word psycho" and given these extracts in order that our logy
We
temerity
may not
ing to overthrow its most cherished dogma, and to en" mind ". large our concept of the word
After
itself
all not only have we a house divided against but one in a state of chaos a science bristling
:
with contradictions,
the
are one and the
same
entirely defined by the extent of the former, so that to of unconscious mental phenomena is said to de-
speak
stroy the
meaning
of
thought, and, as a matter of fact, to talk nonsense. It is this proposition and no less that we seek to over-
throw,
it
is
we hope
want
to burst, in the
mainly
for
of a broader basis,
and on account of
and,
this rigid
we may
psychology has
W. James,
Psychology, p. 468.
27
made
a greater advance
structure.
be better prepared for the consideration of the connection of mind with consciousness if we
will
The way
briefly
first,
the connection of
mind and
qualities
our personality.
It is confessedly very difficult to
draw the
brain.
line be-
in the
human
intelligible connection of the two is well ex" The great character pressed by Dr. Browne. Connection of current opinion appears to be that wherever of mind and
.
.
.
The
brain.
there
psychical function, actual or potential, which may rise within the range of consciousness. Not only is there apparently inseparlife between the nervous strucand mental phenomena, but the latter are clearly dependent on the former. The ordinary condition of
is
nerve there
is
the nervous system is like that of a moderately charged battery that can be discharged by the completion o;.
the circuit and re-charged by the blood. The will can the circuit. Mental causes can procomplete charged duce effects and physical causes mental effects." 1 " have every reason to believe," says Professor Bain,
"
We
an
that,
with
all
our mental
(physical)
processes,
there
is
unbroken
natural
"
:
succession."
is
Herbert
ever mani-
Spencer says
1
No
thought, no feeling,
Dr.
W.
A. P. Browne
in,
xii., p.
321.
28
a physical force.
scientific
This
principle
1
will
before
long be a
common-
place."
Having thus marked the intimate connection and Distinction interdependence of mind and brain, we
mhuUnd
brain.
insist
must, to keep the balance of truth, equally on the radical distinction between the
two.
"
as
"
entirely distinct
Mind
is
not a product of cerebral evolution." 2 Again Herbert Spencer sounds a timely note of warn" Here indeed we arrive at the barrier which needs ing. to be perpetually pointed out alike to those who seek
materialistic explanations of mental to those who are alarmed lest such
phenomena, and
be found.
The
much
lieve that
mind may
.
there is not the remotest possiof so For the concept we form bility interpreting it. of matter is but the symbol of some form of power
.
.
matter, whereas
unknown
to us.
Mind
is
also
unknowable, and the simplest form under which we can think of its substance is but a symbol of something that can never be rendered into Neverthethought. less, were we compelled to choose between translating mental phenomena into physical phenomena, or of
1
Herbert Spencer, First Principles of Psychology. Prof. Calderwood, Relations of Mind and Body, p. 307.
IN
MAN
29
translating physical phenomena into mental phenolatter alternative would seem the more
1
acceptable."
may not
the connection of
brief description
mind and
brain, to give a
Divisions of
thebrain
throws
light
on mental
For
this purpose
and
lesser, or
cerebrum and
cerebellum, and into two halves right and left, we may divide the cerebrum into three regions, consisting from
above downwards of
cortex
or
surface
brain,
basal
agent in brain
sists of
work known
as grey matter,
masses
of brain cells.
The medulla
"the
on
co-ordi2
It is
all
the
processes connected with the passive or vegetative life of the body as contrasted with the active or animal life.
All the processes carried
of consciousness.
.
on here are
far
below the
level
The
three in
basal ganglia of the mid-brain are principally number; the corpora quadrigemina, connected
;
with sight the corpora striata, undoubtedly with motion, and the optic thalami, probably with sensation.
1
Herbert Spencer, First Principles of Psychology, 2nd D. Ferrier, Functions of the Brain.
edition, p. 63.
30
functions of animal
voluntary actions. The cortex is the seat of conscious sensation, though we are by no means conscious of all that takes place
for
probably do, continually reach it of which we are wholly or partially unconscious in many cases, of course, this is accounted for by non-attention. On the other
;
hand, it would appear from recent researches that it is not possible to be conscious of any currents that do not
reach the surface of the brain.
(See diagram.)
regard to there being two hemispheres right and left, Gall, Spurzheim, Dr. A. L. Wigan, Sir H. Holland, Hughlings Jackson and Brown Sequard conclude
With
we have two
common
action,
and that we have probably two minds acting normally in perfect harmony, but which can and do act separately in
many
conditions.
When
Cell actions
a nerve
cell acts (whatever this means), imtend to pass off from it along its various pulses
and nerve
paths.
connected nerve
fibres,
number
of
these
;
may
is
if
the action
IN
MAN
31
may
fibres in
any
direction. 1
Further, regarding the neuron, or the cell and fibres, the following is now known.
"
It
proceeding from the brain cells) join, New dis _ covenes and, joining, constitute continuous paths through the grey matter by which the nerve impulses
fibres
from group to group, and ultiAnd one far-reaching fibre to another. mately from that which this method (of Golgi) has shown is that union cannot be traced, but what is everywhere to be
pass from
cell to cell,
denperceived is that these branching processes, drons' or 'dendrites,' as they are termed, end in the ground substance or matrix, as it may be termed, in
'
'
'
which the
In this matrix only the dimmest trace of structure can be seen, and yet there must " There is be an arrangement of its elements."
cells lie.
thus discontinuity where there was supposed to be All nerve fibres, as you know, are procontinuity.
longations from nerve cells. cell and are part of it, so that
They belong
to
the
now
its
each consisting of a
cell
with
processes,
and the
i It appears that by means of Golgi' s methods of silver staining brain cells the following facts are established. Each cell has a mass of small branching fibres called dendrites, and one large axial fibre called a neuraxon, which soon becomes medullated. The cell with its fibres is called a neuron, and with regard to it it appears that the molecular movements in the dendrites are towards the cell and in the neuraxon from it, or afferent and efferent and it is generally the This gives an terminal of a neuraxon that is connected with a dendrite. anatomical basis for the psychic acts of feeling, voluntary motion and associaMed. Journal, 21st August, 1897.) tion, etc. (See Sir M. Foster in Brit.
;
32
To each of these elements processes do not join. the word 'neuron' has been applied. Yet the nerve
impulses pass from one to another they pass, therefore, by some unseen path through the matrix in which
;
Nerve
the processes end." " Max Schultze observed also the passage of the fibrils (of which the supposed homogeneous
fibres
.
composed) without any interruption. That has also been securely demonstrated and proved by the new method of Golgi. So that we have this astounding transformation in that
which we know
of nerve
mechanism
we have
in every
and
passing uninterruptedly through the nerve cells to the branching processes, and ending From that disat the terminations of their branches.
we have
those
fibrils
who
Those
fibrils
the
cell
body.
Our
fascinating from
the analogy of the cell body to a tiny battery originatMoreing a current all that entirely disappears.
over,
in
if
we
some
cases,
we
feel
at
once that
it
is
one of
arrangements which must be universal, and we must once for all give up
those
fundamental
structural
IN
MAN
33
are
sources of nerve
impulse." To return
"
:
The
apparatus executes. First the ideal and motor centres in the cortex then the automatic action of the corpora striata. Impulse is transmitted thence, through the an;
pyramidal and bodies of the and anterior columns, olivary portion 2 cord." anterior columns of the spinal
It appears that, apart from the cortex, the nerve in the lower parts of the brain consist paths * Sensonof sensori-motor arcs, the nerve currents motor nerve
,
arriving at the hinder part of the brain by the posterior part of the cord, and leaving the anterior ganglia, notably the corpora striata, and descending down
the front of the spinal cord, in the resulting motor imTo use now the words of Dr. Hill " On these pulse.
:
the lower system, are arcs, collectively superadded arcs, the loops of which lie in the higher grey matter (of the cortex). At the same time, therefore, that
which
make up
One carry the impulse back again to the lower arc. which the routes is that quite certain, namely, thing
are the
most frequently used are the most open, and 3 therefore the most easily traversed." (See diagram.)
in Brit. Med. Journal, 6th November, 1S97, p. 1359. Influence of the Mind on the Body, vol. ii., p. 145. Prof. A. Hill, Cantab., "Paper on "Reflex Action," Victoria Institute Proceedings, 1893.
1
Sir
W.
R. Gowers
Hack Tuke,
34
current arriving at the brain may take one of three courses either directly originating unconscious action in the lower brain or, travelling in a short arc by the
mid-brain, produce unconscious action there or, proceeding further in a long arc by the cortex, end in conscious action. In connection with this it may be
;
all two deep in one the the basal of the mid or origins, ganglia unconscious brain, and the other in the cortex or upper
conscious brain.
graphically and simply shown by the letter "A," where 1 and lx are respectively the origin of the
This
is
afferent current
of the efferent, 2
and
unconscious mid-brain
cortical centres.
2 to lx.
short circuit
is
a current
may
travel
by 2
It
IN
MAN
35
purely hypothetical.
It only now remains for us very briefly to touch on the action and qualities of mind before reach- Will power
ing in conclusion the question with which we ^oneVby sensatlon Is mind limited by consciousness ? started
-
First of
then with regard to the old classical question as to whether the "mind" which we have seen is so
all
inseparably associated with nerve cell action, is the player or the tune of the harp, the rower or the motion
of the boat
the
cells in question.
Professor E.
"
Montgomery
We
that our
movements
are not directed and controlled by the peripheral stimulation of sensory elements. In shaping our actions we
are not slavishly executing the immediate promptings This is so palpable a truth of our actual environment.
that no serious doubt concerning the same has ever 1 The existence of the gained or ever can gain ground."
The is proved by knowledge and experience. consciousness of effort as well as purpose in will when running counter to prompting sensations is strong
will
proof
(in
spite of explanations)
:
Carpenter says
"It
is
different
from
the general resultant of the automatic activities of the mind for in the first place all alcoholic stimulants excite the automatic activity of the mind while
;
v., p. 28.
36
1 No doubt, howdiminishing the power of the will "ever, a large part of the mind runs in grooves, which, though they may be unknown and unfelt, are none the
less real.
The
lines of
many
The three great divisions of the mind generally laid down by psychologists of feeling, knowing, and willing, 2 first came from Germany before the days of Kant.
Professor
"
Dunn
At birth the nascent consciousness becomes awakened, purely sensational at first and emerges step by step from self-consciousness to world-consciousness, and
;
intel-
This,
Unconscious
conscious
however, practically traces the rise of our mind to unconscious origins, and indeed all
willing, thinking,
powers.
based on unconscious springs and trains of thought and motion. Even when developed, many mental qualities seem partly or wholly unconscious.
Intuition
may
be conscious
Perception is
General synthesis
and by these
alone, we direct and control the main expenditure This, however, is not done so much by reason as by feeling it is in the heart, not in the head, as Dr. Maudsley points out, that our deepest feelings are rooted, and he does ill service to the religious faiths who strives to base them on the feeble apprehensions of human reason the driving impulse by which men are moved to act comes from feeling rather than reason. psychology," he says, "which finds the motive power in reason might be likened to a science which finds the power for the tidal movements not in
2
By
of
life
and
force.
"A
the
moon but
in the
moonshine."
IN
MAN
so
37
and
so,
others cannot.
Kant says: "Innumerable are the sensations of perception of which we are not conscious, although we must undoubtedly conclude that we have some obscure
ideas, as they
may
well as in man).
be called (to be found in animals as The clear ideas indeed are but an
same exposed to conThat only a few spots in the great chart of our minds are illuminated may well fill us with amazement in contemplating this nature of ours." 1
sciousness.
Tact, the psychic analogue of touch, is a unconscious faculty of origin. The will itself may be unconscious. " The conscious
:
To proceed
and unconscious
wills
are essentially
dis-
unconscious
"
tinguished by this, that the idea which forms the object of will is conscious in the one case, un-
"If
it is
two kinds
language already offers the term exactly covering the conception free will while will must be retained for the general the word
of will, for conscious will
'
'
principle,
which
exists in us all
it
unconscious
will."
"We may
volition
is
regard
That we can
only get to see the finished result, and that the glances we succeed in throwing into the laboratory never reveal
1
2
3
Kant, section v., Anthropologica. Ed. v. Hartniann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. L,
Ibid., vol.
ii.,
p. 253.
p. 69.
38
reaction of
those unconscious depths of the soul where occur the the will on motives and its passage into
!
definite volition."
creation of the beautiful by man proceeds from unconscious processes whose results the feeling and the discovery of the beautiful represent in consciousness,
"
The The
is of
unconscious origin.
faculties.
one of the most mysterious of our unconscious The more it is considered the more wonder-
ful
The ordinary
Genius and
mstinct.
appear. does everything with conscious choice, the genius acts on impulses from unartist
it
conscious sources.
There
is
a lack in the
former of " divine frenzy, the powerful breath of the unconscious, which appears to consciousness as higher and
inexplicable suggestions which it is forced to apprehend as facts, without ever being able to unravel their source ". 3
"
between talent and genius is the difference between the conscious and the unconscious." 4
difference
Instinct is not the result of
The
mere
results of
the mechanical foundation of the organisation of the " brain, but the individual's own activity, springing from
his inmost nature and character
1
".
Ed.
v.
vol.
i.,
p. 263.
Ibid., p. 278.
vol.
i.,
Ed.
v.
p. 113.
IN
MAN
may
39
element in
"
man
lies in
the
unconscious.
Consciousness
perhaps
influence actions by presenting motives to react on the unconscious ethical, but whether this reaction follows, " consciousness must calmly wait." ! Mystics in every
knowledge."
"Our
ego,"
is
"
or personality, as defined by Herbert the permanent nexus, which is in a state of consciousness, but personality
denned.
which holds
that though the conscious mind would fain arrogate the personality to itself, that " personality holds a great deal more than mere states
I think, however,
all feel,
we
of consciousness
"
together.
Indeed, as Spencer implies, the "ego" seems to have its origin or source in the unconscious region.
Professor Barrett (Dublin) says " It is to the existence and vital faculty of this large area of our person:
submerged below the level of consciousness, that I wish to draw attention, for psychologists are agreed that its range must be extended to include something more than is covered by our normal selfality,
is
which
consciousness.
What we
call
'ourself
is
a something
which
in the background of our consciousness, us to combine the series of impressions made enabling or the states of feeling within us, into a conupon us,
lies
Ed.
v.
vol.
i.,
p. 265.
40
We
are
now
from various
see that
it
its various developments, to tends to burst the confining wall everywhere of consciousness that has so long interposed as an iron
sides,
and in
barrier
out,
between which we
it
word, "mind". Let us then, in the first place, see what can be said favour of the limitation of ''mind"
to
consciousness,
for to us
the limitation
is
is
so transit
parently
artificial
that
it
well to
know
is
still
seriously and stoutly maintained. " Mind is to be understood as the subject of Thus,
limited to conscious-
phenomena
are conscious.
Consciousness
...
of
is
what extension is to matter. We cannot conceive mind without consciousness, or a body with1 out extension.""
(1)
the
;
sum
of conscious-
ness at any instant in an individual or as (2) the sum of the consciousness during the life of an individual,
itself.
consciousness being not an attribute of mind, but mind " Again we get the extreme statements, All and
only the
2 phenomena that are conscious are psychical ", "Wherever consciousness is impossible, mental action
1-1
is
impossible.
no such things as unconscious psychical acts. Again, " psychical and conscious are for us, at least at the
1
Sir
W.
ix.
2 Prof. 3 Prof.
Ziehen, Psychology, p.
and Body,
p. 269.
IN
MAN
41
beginning of our investigation, identical. The conception of unconscious psychical processes is for us an
empty conception". Here we find a little hedging, but what is curious, on the same page we get an illustra1
tion
given of passing a friend unconsciously when absorbed in thought, coming to our consciousness
after.
2
not very intense in consequence This theory is of the predominance of other ideas ". the fact that these unsimple partly negatived by
tion which, however,
is
conscious impressions do not rise to consciousness as other ideas lessen, but are flashed into consciousness
often at long intervals afterwards though, of course, time made at the an impression was unconsciously.
;
sciousness
side
it,
Again, ''Though in a loose sense of the term consome mental events may be said to be outin another
and
stricter sense of
the word
all
that
sciousness.
same time an element of conis the widest word in our vocabulary, and embraces everything that mind emis
mental
is
at the
Consciousness
braces."
if so, it
This may be true as used by Mr. Mill, but embraces unconsciousness and becomes a word
3
:
without meaning. Professor Alexander (Oxford) says " Mind and consciousness are coextensive, though not
1
Ibid.
Mind,
p. 227.
42
synonymous.
sciousness."
mind
Aristotle,
Mill,
Hamilton, and
is
Ward
necessary form of mental states, and that mind cannot be conceived without it, and yet, as we shall see, more
own
is
.,
of mind. faculty *
The
school of Descartes
and Locke, i.e., the whole of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, expressly held that
psychology has the same limit as consciousness, and ends with it. What is without consciousness is re-
manded
to physiology, and between the two sciences the line of demarcation is absolute. Consequently all
those penumbral phenomena which form the transition from clear consciousness to perfect unconsciousness
were forgotten, and hence came superficial explanations and insufficient and incomplete views." But "the
nature of things cannot be violated with impunity. Leibnitz alone in the seventeenth century saw the importance of this. Less was not to be expected of the inventor of the infinitesimal calculus. By his distinction between perception (conscious) and apperception (unconscious) he opened up a road in which in our
what
tardily entered.
There
is
no completed work on
the subject. Such a work would need to show that most if not all the operations of the soul may be produced under a twofold form, that there are in us two
IN
MAN
43
modes
of activity, the
!
other unconscious."
Turning
*
now
to
those
psychical
.
action,
we
find
Testimony
mental importance
unconscious psychical life, the thorough dependence of the former on the latter, is, with Maudsley, a firm conviction. Amongst others he cites Hamilton,
Carlyle and L. P. F. Kichter in support of
it.
it
forunconsciousmind.
G. H.
Lewes
Maudsley equally
clearly,
but to our mind with far greater reason, sees unconHe says: "It is a truth that sciousness everywhere.
cannot be too distinctly borne in mind that consciousthat it is not mind, is not coextensive with mind "The but an incidental accompaniment of mind". 2
ness
;
of mental function as work might go on without consciousness, just as the machinery of a clock might work without a dial. It is a necessary concomitant,
whole business
not an energy at work in the manufacture of the mental The misfortune is that ordinary language organism. assumes it to be a kind of superior energy." 3 Again, " Those base on the of con-
who
sciousness cannot
essential to
is
not
moment
mental being at every moment, nor at any coextensive with the whole of it, but that
J3.
Maudsley,
p. 25,
Maudsley
in
Mind,
44
ally in the
A. Bain thinks
that
"
when
absolutely
The term
consciousness refers purely to the moments of mental wakefulness or mental efficiency for definite ends." 2
may act upon impresand may elaborate intellectual results such as we might have attained by the intentional direction of our minds to the subject without any
sions transmitted to
it,
To
consciousness on our
own
part, is held
by
many metaan
alto-
more
especially in
England,
to be
most objectionable
doctrine.
But
which has been current amongst metaphysicians in Germany from the time of Leibnitz to the present day, and which was systematically expounded by Sir Wm. Hamilton that the mind may
of a doctrine
undergo modifications, sometimes of very considerable importance, without being itself conscious of the process until its results present themselves to the consciousness, in the new ideas or new combinations of
ideas,
This " Unconwhich the process has evolved. " is scious cerebration" or "Latent mental modification
the process parallel in the higher sphere of cerebral or mental activity to the movement of our limbs, and to the direction of these movements through our
visual sense
1
which we put in
train volitionally
when
Mandsley in Mind, vol. xii., p. 489. Prof. A. Bajn in Mind, new series, vol.
iii.,
p. 353.
IN
MAN
45
set out on some habitually repeated walk, but which then proceed not only automatically but unconsciously, so long as our attention continues to be uninterruptedly
In 1888 the Aristotelian Society held a special meet" ing to decide if Mind is synonymous with Mind is not
Consciousness
tive.
".
It
Professor
SKE"
sciousness -
me that President of the Society, said both usage and accuracy of definition alike concur in
deciding the question in the negative, for if we identify mind with consciousness, what are we to do with those
states
" It seems to
commonly
called
With
We
when
roll of witnesses.
:
" In the developed soul there Professor Beneke says a perpetual alternation of consciousness and uncon-
sciousness.
tinues
still
when
it
This un-
memory."
i
Sir
W. Hamilton
practically admits
Elementary Psychology,
p. 190.
46
of
and
last links
alone are
recognised, being like a row of billiard balls, which if struck at one end only the last one moves, the vibration
being only transmitted through the rest. He gives an instance of suddenly, when on Ben Lomond, thinking of the Prussian system of education. These were the
first
and
last links,
recalled after, were that previously on the mountain he had met a German, and this German was a Prussian.
" Some hold that these hidden links rise into says consciousness momentarily, but are forgotten". 1 But a few pages previously he says " The whole we are conscious of is constructed out of what we are not
He
conscious of". 2
"It
is
Evidence of
Lazarus,
Ferrier and Bastian.
necessary to realise," quoting G. F. Stout, " clearly that psychical dispositions, out of
consciousness, form an indispensable factor in mental processes throughout conscious life." 3
These
it
psychological
writers
of
advanced
views
all feel
necessary to state
them
as tentative
and novel simply because the bulk, not alone of metaphysicians, but psychologists, have undoubtedly held
mind is consciousness. Some, using, as we have seen, a "wide sense, have included under the term, states that may become conscious if sufficient attention is directed to them. But to talk of unconscious mind was distinctly held to be a contradiction in terms,
that
,,
1 W. B. Carpenter, Mental Physiology, 4th edition, p. 515. ton, Lectures in Metaphysics, vol. i., p. 354. 2 Sir W. Hamilton, Lectures in Metaphysics, vol. i., p. 348.
Sir
W.
Hamil-
p. 23,
IN
MAN
47
nearly universally acknowledged, was considered as late as 1876 a most objectionable doctrine. " have first of all to Professor Lazarus says life is made up of conour that remember psychic
:
now
We
We
think of con-
sciousness as a brightly illuminated space surrounded with widely extended darkness, with the dim elements,
though outside consciousness, co-operating with those " x That we can have within in a state of co-vibration.'"
thoughts and not be conscious of them, perform actions and not be conscious of them, are facts which prove
that a theory of the
states
of the
mind which
is
limited to conscious
unless the
meaning
unconscious states."
The testimony
as follows
"
:
The
facts of physiology
have
and have as background sub- consciousness and unconsciousness. At first it seems like a
the mental
life,
contradiction to speak of facts of unconsciousness as belonging to psychology, but when it is considered that
same changes in the nervous system may be accompanied by consciousness, or some sub-conscious change, it is evident that mind must consist of other
the
elements than those which appear in consciousness,. The study of physiology was necessary to bring out
1
Prof. Lazarus in
Mind,
48
in
our
psychical activity." " The metaphysical view that mind and conAgain, sciousness form an indivisible unity will not harmonise
for
whole tracts
may be
cut
out of the territory of intellectual consciousness without interfering with the integrity of unconsciousness, and
well
may
Conscious and sub- conscious states are admitted by all writers. Unconscious states are proved to have an
equal claim, because they not only take place in the same organ and under the same essential condition as
in the conscious or sub-conscious states.*
We
muTbe
enlarged,
will
Meaning of
Bastian
now sum up the evidence in the words of " If we are, as so many philosophers
:
mind
as co-
we
shall find
mind reduced
jointed series of
scious
initial
states of various
kinds
while
a multitude of
claim to be included under this category. For these and other reasons we feel ourselves driven to the conclusion that the
1
common
Mind,
T.
White
in
*
8 *
G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, prob. 11, p. 129. D. Ferrier, Functions of Brain. G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, 3rd series, p. 157.
IN
MAN
49
is alto-
mind
'
is
one which
is
now admitted fact concerning the frequent interpolation of unconscious nerve actions as integral parts of mental processes, only one course
mind,
in face of the
lies
open to
'
us.
'
We
signification of
the term
"
mind
itself."
This
is
no question
of choice,
of the
necessity.
The meaning
word
mind
'
must be
...
as mental
phenomena, the functional results of all nerve actions whether these nerve actions are accompanied by a
. . .
2 "Let us enlarge recognised conscious phasis or no." our conception and definition of mind. Let us openly
which has already been tacitly implied by Instead of supposing that mind and consciousmany. ness are co-extensive, let us make mind include all
profess that
We
must
3 [Carpenter] has served to pave the way for it." The case for the enlargement of the scope of has now been placed before our readers, the
mind
writer having sought all through to establish the various points by other voices than his own, and
1
-i
Conclusion.
it
C. Bastian, Brain as an Orqan of Mind, p. 146. Ibid., p. 148. C. Bastian in the Journal of Mental Science, vol. xv., p. 522. If any " to tlie term nerve actions" as being a materialistic view of mind, it object must be understood that the doctrine of "the unconscious mind," so far from relegating psychic phenomena to the physical, is the sole means of rescuing
2 3
them trom
it.
50
is for
of
separably connected with unconscious psychic actions and finally whether when speaking of the mind that is
in
man
it
is
not
now
we
trust
we have
is this
'
"
:
Are we to
mind
to that part
;
made
us by consciousness and introspection or is the word henceforth to include all the powers in us that
we know and
recognise by various means are mental,' whether they be seen or unseen ?" For it appears indeed to the writer that the con'
ConsciousS S a e
sni aii
scious
mind
is
p art
the
South Pacific is a mere ring of rock in the water, of insignificant size, to the sailor; but to the biologist or geologist it is the highest peak of a
stupendous structure that rises from the bottom of the ocean as a mountain miles high. Commencing as it
does in the very smallest beginnings, it remains unrecognised until it rises above the surface of the sea.
mmd.
We
;
only see the top of this structure and call it an island indeed, it is all we are conscious of except by soundings or occasional glimpses of what is beneath, on calm days
or at low tides. that of the
it
which we may call and which constitute mind, only a very small pormental,
of the psychic forces
sum
IN
MAN
51
think the point raised in this chapter has interest. It is not so. Had it not
the most far-reaching practical issues throughout life work would never have been written. The
for children
can be moulded unconsciously with far greater ease than through their consciousness. It gives also a great key to the cause and cure of many, if not of most,
diseases.
It
lays bare
at
last
the foundations of
CHAPTER
ni.
discuss
whether, outside consciousness, processes are not carried on as purely "mental" as any
if
within, and
"
processes and actions that exhibit the qualities we recognise as "mental" or "psychical," whether they be conducted in consciousness or unconinclude
sciously, or partly the
mind
"
We
tive,
found the
first
conclusion, whether
no, that
if
and, with regard to the second, we came to the we carried our readers with us or
the whole science of the study of mind, call it what you will, is to be rescued from the paralysing influence of a narrow shibboleth and placed upon
modern must equally include all psychical processes, regardless whether the phenomenon of and the narrow consciousness be present or absent shibboleth to which we have alluded (still muttered with reverence in some English and also foreign psychologies, though more often than not contradicted
rational grounds that accord with the results of
research, the
"
(52)
53
same work), that consciousness is mind and mind consciousness, be at last and for ever set aside.
chapter we propose, with great review the leading ideas as to con-
In this present
brevity, to pass in
the whole question of unconscious mental action. " Consciousness, then, is well spoken of as perhaps the most r terms ". 1 ,, a protean of psychological L J What is conMany writers indeed, as we have already sdousness? ^
.
iews of
seen, logically forced to acknowledge uncon- Ward, L6W6S scious mental processes, though professing Mahers,
rigidly to adhere to their ancient belief of
consciousness and
word
protean or elastic to embrace unconsciousness itself; thus depriving it of all meaning. " Whoever reflects," says Lewes, " on the numerous
sufficiently
ambiguities and misapprehensions to which the term consciousness gives rise, will regret that the term can-
not be banished altogether." 2 Professor Mahers does not definitely use the word to mean unconsciousness, but declares it includes our
whole psychical existence. He says "In its widest sense, consciousness, as opposed to unconsciousness, denotes all modes of mental life. ... It is, in fact,
:
total of
Jas. Ward, Mind, vol. viiL, p. 476. 8 G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and 8 Prof. Mahers, Psyclwlogy, p. 25.
Mind, 3rd
series, p. 143.
54
ing knowledge. The scholastic definition was Perceptio " that qua mens de presenti, siw statu admonetus ; one
many
Again,
totality) of
"
Consciousness
is
what passes
in a man's
is
own mind V
Or,
Consciousness
a special faculty of
mind
"
Both of these (Reid, Stewart, Burn, Hutcheson, etc.). " is mind". definition Consciousness fatal the escape
Plato, Aristotle, Locke, Leibnitz, Kant,
and Hamil.
ton
Plato, Aristotle, Leibnitz,
in
various
as the genus of
Kant.HamiiDavidson,
"
others, says,
Conscious-
best described as
a succession of
states of existence
volition
require a good deal of explanation to make intelligible. Indeed, the expression "states of existence," which is
is
to ordinary
"A
the
coined.
In
no
states,
3
being a
Again, "To perfectly simple never-changing of consciousness make states synonymous with states
act."
of
is
scarcely less
t-
i.
55
would be
be conscious acts". 1
"He who
thinks
to
illuminate the whole range of mental action by the light of his own consciousness is not unlike one who
rushlight."
" consciousness may be direct Maudsley points out or transcendental"; and states that "empirical psy:
chology other". 3
is
t^,
is
That
it
in;
h yp theses
dispensable,
accompaniment
mental
life
a secondary
phenomenon, though consciousness may be regarded as pre2. That the one psychological fact, and as mind itself eminently
;
the unconscious must be regarded, if of consciousness. as the minimum psychical, To us the first is the true proposition agreeing with
call
all
and what we
modern research
the very
fice
meaning
arbitrary definition that does violence to thought. Psychological ingenuity has, however, discovered a
further reason
conscious.
why
'Ibid., p. 44.
56
unconscious which are conscious but without attention " " or W Again, Attention is the common Consciousness is not meaning of the word conscious when used in unconscious" Consciousness 1 ness a loose and popular way "2 is awakeness, attention is awareness."
The
is
Maudsley
"It
may
be said
we
attend to them
to
which I
is is
am
the
tempted to reply, that it is the attention which consciousness and that unconsciousness which
;
not
consciousness because
it
consciousness". 3
After
"
may
"
given to
more
correct scientifically.
"
does
of
conditions
In the
Consciousness varies as
first
the same.
.
Consciousness
.
is
in
a state of
constant change. There is no proof that an to subject. incoming current ever gives us just the same bodily sensation twice.
"A
its
ap-
an
Spades."
Prof. Sully, Pessimism, p. 186. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, 4 W. James, Psychology, p. 157.
3
W.
L. Davidson.
p. 96.
57
in
advance in
exploding the ridiculous theory of Hume and Berkeley that we can have no images (conscious) but of perfectly
definite things.
we
Feelings of tendency are often so vague "What must be are unable to name them at all.
is
admitted
that the definite images of definite psychology form but the very smallest part of our minds as
they actually
live."
Then
is
not a
constant quantity, but that there are gradations of consciousness from its most vivid
... manifestations
through stages of lessening 2 sub-consciousness down to actual unconsciousness." " Consciousness is not a constant quantity, but varies
tensity degree.
and
from the greatest intensity down to zero." 3 " In some cases consciousness approaches a vanishing point, and often reaches and passes
it. (!)
If
now
re-
we choose to
serve
'
'
unconsciousness,' and
consciousness
we
many
mental states
exist
below
The lower
not admit of being definitely fixed." * For instance, " In man we would not suppose general consciousness extinguishes all the lower ganglionic consciousness
it
arose.
We must
expect in
man
a vast
amount
1
of survival
submentally, which,
W. James,
Psychology,
i.w, p. 20.
2
*
Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 242. Maudsley, Mind, vol. xii., p. 491. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 240.
58
while not the mind of the man, is yet mind in the man. A cell or group of cells may be in pain, and yet there
be no pain
known
"
!
We
quote this not as endorsing its views, but on account of the felicitous distinction between the " mind of man "
in
man ".
Once more,
my
full
I try to think, the ideas before consciousness seem to attract of their own
"When
accord the most appropriate of a number of other ideas There seems to be an antechamber lying close at hand.
full of
more or
ken
2
which are
just
beyond
of the
the
full
of consciousness.
is,
The thronging
antechamber
control."
am
my
unconscious process.
Once more
Degrees of conscious-
Professor
Baldwin gives a diagram illustrating the area of consciousness which passes from the outer
circle of the unconscious (as the first degree) the through sub-conscious, passive consciousness, active 3 consciousness or perception, up to apperception
!
Those nerve actions attended by consciousness (to which philosophers have been accustomed to restrict
the words 'mind' and
"
'mental phenomena') constitute in reality only a very small fraction of the sum
total of
"
1
The
much
to
make contem-
2 F.
3
4
M. Stanley (U.S.A), Studies in Evolutionary Psychology, p 33. Galton, Inquiry into Human Faculty, p. 204. Prof. Baldwin, Handbook of Psychology, p. 68. C. Bastian, Brain as an Organ <; Mind, p. 143.
Dr. H.
59
porary psychology different from the psychology of the The distinction that has older empirical school are been drawn between consciousness, sub-consciousness,
:
of sensibility differing
Consciousness
bart
;
all
below which
above
in
it is
The
real
however,
is
more
rather like the eye where the power of gradual, varies from the yellow spot of clear vision corresight sponding to clear consciousness, through the immediate
less
corresponding to
many
undiscriminated conscious experiences, down to the outer part of all, of whose visual impressions we are not aware, corresponding to unconsciousness. " The threshold of consciousness may be compared to the
' '
beneath
it."
But however degrees of consciousness may vary we must avoid, as we have already said, speaking with Leibnitz and Kant of imperceptible perceptions and
unconscious representations. Again, consciousness is not permanent. " Our conscious content or mental presence emanates
1
Prof.
vol.
p.
46
also
Mind,
p.
2 Jas.
Ward,
,
503. article
p. 47.
1,
"Psychology,"
Encyclopedia
Britannica,
9th
60
new
.
creation
It is
from
of the
manent.
utmost importance
,
to
realise
the
,, *
.
speedy
evanescence
"
of conscious states.
It
thought strange,
tinuity
how
persistently
we
of consciousness,
is
when
the truth
that a
conscious state
not continuous, but transient." 2 "Consciousness does not exist from the first in any
it
soul,
" term unconscious mind" is as meaningless as wooden iron" (Ladd), etc. To avoid the expression by talking
of unconscious
consciousness
is
worse.
is
"
flagrant
term of experience
the extension
of states
of
consciousness, as
conscious."
4
On
we must remember
that
vice
" is a Consciousness," says Sully, closely woven the fails to trace the several texture in which eye "
threads or strands.
of
Moreover, there
is
these ingredients are exceedingly shadowy, many belonging to that obscure region of sub-consciousness which it is so hard to penetrate with the light of dis-
criminating attention."
x
Ed. Montgomery, Mind, vol. xiv., p. 498. Beneke, Elements of Psychology p. 185. Prof. Bascom, Comparative Psychology, p.
,
*Ibid., p. 507.
20.
James
Sully,
Mind,
6l
" Unconscious powers possess the inherent capacity of becoming conscious which capacity becomes actual
;
x by stimulants." " Notions existing in the soul can be excited into consciousness by external sense stimulants and by in-
ternal stimulants."
We all
As
it is
know how we
as a
by consciousness,
times
value of consciousness.
interesting to observe
how
it is
at
In the
first
and conscious
is
un-
doubted
and the
moment
they become habitual and so sub-conscious (as On the in prayers, speeches, etc.) is well known.
other hand
"
First,
The
part played by consciousness in mental function has been an insuperable bar to true observation, and
appreciation of
accomplish of itself
ness
.
what the nervous system can and does without any help from consciousactive (self-)consciousness
is
Secondly, detrimental
"
An
always
to
the
best
and
is
the
most
successful
thought.
1
Ibid., p. 29.
p. 511.
62
"
We
all
know when
ease
any action by habit, how consciousness or will in its performance hinders rather
it.
than helps
The
forth
mind
is
well set
by
" Conscious
mind stands
The mechanical
is
by them. He is called on to interfere only unusual action has to be carried out, and some when
reflection
Moreover, just as
the principal of an office is able to hand over work to his subordinates when it ceases to be unusual, and becomes
rules, so
the conscious
mind
3
able to
familiar."
Thirdly,
Conscious*
not
itself
always a true
always
reliable.
within
own
sphere
;
^o observe accurately
effort
mind
rendered un-
natural,
and
work
to pervert feeling
and
vitiate reasoning.
The
results
are therefore
p. 308.
Sully,
63
may be
" It
man
the
" that if a very well known," says Myers, in the hypnotic state be ordered to perform a
is
now
that he
he has been awakened, he will do it in is acting from his own choice and
will."
l
up, therefore, as far as we have gone, we find " " consciousness is a word of most protean and doubtful meaning in the language of much current
To sum
that the
word
psychology
in
itself,
is
though
cent.
varies in-
definitely in intensity
most evanestestimony
is
Even when
accurately observed
its
for a
moment
its
physical basis.
physical
consllousness
-
Is consciousness a cause
Consciousness accompanies the stream of innervation, being mainly of things seen if the stream is
reply,
strongest occipitally, of things heard if it is strongest temporally, of things felt if the stream occupies most
intensely the
1
motor zone". 3
"There
is
no conscious
vol. vii. p. 302,
F.
W.
2
*
T. Laycock,
W.
H. Myers, Proceedings of Psychical Research Society Mind and Brain, vol. i., chap, iv, James, Psychology, p. 118,
64
"
The consciousness
of
the
moment may be
con-
ceived to be the complex product of an infinite multitude of simple and compound vibrations coming from
the external and internal organs of the body." 2 " Consciousness is a shadow of the corresponding
nerve action.
The amount
of
consciousness varies
Scenes, inversely with the antiquity of the action. and sounds make less vivid sights impressions on 3 consciousness by use and repetition."
in the cortex." 4
"The immediate
ness
is
an activity of some
6
heminot, as
sphere."
"We
far as
is
the
mind by
interaction of the
the activity of the cortex and hence the harmony of the two are disturbed, as by narcotics or a violent blow, it is lost. " a On the other of
;
two
for
when
hand,
glass
do". 6
Professor Huxley, with characteristic boldness in
1
2 8 4 6
Maudsley, Physiology of the Mind, p. 374. Ed. v. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. xi., p. 73. See C. Mercier, in Tuke's Dictionary of Psychology, 1892, pp. 249, 254,
Jas. Sully, T/ie
W. James,
Human Mind,
p. 49.
65
shall arrive at a
While Bain
"
A anything physically? into can be converted in the dark carbon of Co, pound without burning and a certain amount of heat prosciousness)
cost
s P eculatlons -
can also be burned to give off light and heat. It would seem that the heat of the latter subtracted from the heat of the former method should give the
duced.
It
amount
of
force spent in
light
so
we have nerve
actions without subjectivity (consciousness), and other actions with subjectivity. In both classes there is an
expenditure of force with physical results. The point would be to observe whether the physical results were
not, in the case of subjectivity
accompanying, the
2
full
is
per-
haps more
proved
fact.
of
an interesting
"
scientific
guess than a
Consciousness is due not only to of the nerve channel, as to narrowness but novelty,
states that
electricity only
He
produces light
when
the current
is
ob-
Instructed under high pressure and great friction. is as the volume of nerve consciousness of tensity
current.
Hence
xxii., p. 78,
66
formations are in the medulla brain (sub-conscious), and are under and (unconscious) unconscious newer ones are in the cortex, and are
The
conscious."
The
its
sight of
extra COnidea of
the
associated
mechanical contiguity or
statical
and
its
principles to its psychical facts and occurrences ever remain a futile undertaking." 2
must
arises
from sensations
following two points are of interest " Consciousness is inseparable from feeling, but not, as it appears to me, from volition or thought. True,
The
our actions and thoughts are usually conscious . but consciousness of an act is manifestly not the act, and although the assertion is less obvious, I believe that
. .
is
distinct
from the
sensations
thought."
"
Some
observers
suppose that
tactile
unchanged from the skin to the cortex, and then suddenly blossom into sensations. We may ask what
travel
is
*
'
See C. Merrier, in Tuke's Psychological Dictionary, 1892, pp. 256, 257. Ed. Montgomery, Mind, vol. vii., p. 499. A. Bain, Senses and Intellect, p. 1,
67
along the sensory tract, unless it be that at each relay some transformation, some further elaboration of the
impulses takes place, until what were relatively simple impulses along the afferent nerves, are, by successive
steps,
call
conscious sensation
"
not however only the result of sensa" The essence Discrhnition but of another faculty.
Consciousness
is
and foundation
ness
is
natlon -
discrimination."
its
"In
should occur in
should not only be experienced, but discriminated. As long as the sensations are confused together the soul remains in its elementary condition of unconsciousness."
3
Full consciousness,
is
Spencer,
tion of a resemblance
Hobbes says
and the perception of a difference. "It is almost all one for a man to be
always sensible of one and the same thing, and not to be sensible at all of anything ".
To reach
culty
full
consciousness
and a
real effort.
Many,
is
minimum
of consciousness
necessary to follow
what
said or written,
and often
read-
not even
this.
To reach
full
consciousness
when
ing familiar
Bible), the
effort
2 3
Sir Michael Foster, Physiology, 5th edition, p. 1106. Kirchener, Psychology, p. 73. Dr. Noah Porter, Intellect, p. 100,
Human
68
of attention.
way
is
nouncing the words distinctly with the mouth then to close the eyes and fix the mind on the words in the brain,
till
conscious that you have grasped their full meaning. That consciousness is, as Spencer asserts, an alterna-
tion of
there
may be illustrated in great grief. If the one state of overwhelming sorrow, after only a time it ceases to be felt so acutely, or to rise into full
states
is
two
consciousness.
of surroundings, such
as from going out or seeing fresh people, brings back the grief at once into full consciousness.
We
' '
' '
Conscious-
by J considering to
"
Cogito, ergo
its
relation to the
nessandthe
6TO
means
'
(who am)
(who
' '
This implies that consciousness is not the think) am. fundamental fact of being. There is the conscious I
'I'.
"
'
lies
deep
buried beneath
all
conscious manifestations.
its
They
some
of
which reach
lowest depths. (quoted above) assumes the fact of unconsciousness beneath consciousness, being the I who am as the
'
'
others, but none of which reach the Inevitably the axiom of Descartes
basis
of
the
'
'
who
think.
Consciousness exists
while fresh nerve tracts are being adapted for fresh when these are per;
The elements
vol. xii., p. 491,
of
mental
Maudsley, Mind,
69
action are cap il le of acting together before consciousness dawns (reflex action) and after it has set (acquired consciousness plainly is not an essential part reflexes)
;
of the
mechanism
1
of the
added."
Sully and Bain point out that consciousness synonymous with self-consciousness.
not
From
entire
all
this
we
is
not our
self, '
moon
is
Secondary
consciousness.
Not only our ego, however, can be split up into conscious and unconscious, but consciousness itself Professor Binet is by no means one and indivisible.
(Sorbonne) says, in the conclusion of his Alterations de " exist in the same that there
la PersonaliU, may individual a plurality of consciousness, and each of these consciousnesses is only aware of that which passes
within
its
own
special realm.
consciousness
there
may
exist
within
us conscious
thoughts of which we know nothing." (!) Professor Myers says: "I suggest that the stream of consciousness in which we habitually live is not the only consciousness which exists in connection with our
organism.
I hold
it
is
other
conthoughts, feelings, memories may now be actively kind of cowithin me in some scious as we say ordination with my organism and forming some part
'
of
my
1
total individuality."
Maudsley, Mind, vol. xii., p. 494. F. W. G. Myers, Journal of Psychical Research Society, vol.
vii.,
p. 301.
70
"
may
"
The phenomena
of
possibly in
states
one of those
whose existence we have so often to recognise." 2 Gurney, Binet and Janet have shown that many
ignored elements of our characters are preserved, as they say, in split-off poriions of the consciousness
which can be tapped in certain ways. We would rather account for such phenomena by saying these elements are dormant in the unconscious
mind, but can be brought into consciousness by special means.
Desson, in Das Doppel Ich, speaking of semi" unconscious acts, says They must belong to a sub:
Max
consciousness
which,
in
relation
to
the
far
more
In the above, as well as in other paragraphs we have quoted, there is much with which we do not wholly
it is sufficiently obvious that the only solid amidst the quagmire of "may-bes" and other ground " is to hold fast to the loose and popular" speculations, meaning of consciousness, and to understand by the
agree
but
word that
of
conscious, and not that of which our cells or organs may or may not be conscious and above all, not that
1
W.
James, Psychology,
p. 206.
71
this) of
which
Even when the scope of we know nothing of the thus limited, the word safely consciousness. Fortuof cause of the phenomenon
we
nately,
not necessary for us, in this monograph, to extended make any inquiry into the conscious, our and we have therefore subject being the unconscious merely given a brief survey of current views on the
it is
;
a useful and necesleading facts connected with it, as next chapter. of our sary introduction to the subject
1
Body,
Prof. Calderwood asserts consciousness in sleep, Relations of Mind and 1898. See also chap. vii. for full quotation. p. 19 ; Vict. Institute, April,
CHAPTEB
Befoee discussing mode of action of
briefly pass in
IV.
and
will
review a further collection of the strongest statements against it that we have been able to
and others. gather from the writings of psychologists have already done this at some length in chapter
We
ii.,
and we merely give these in addition, as we desire in this work to state as fairly as may be both sides of the question, rather than present a merely one-sided
statement excluding all contradictory evidence. It will be observed in the quotations we give that the writers are remarkable rather for vigour than
Testimonies
unconscious
for
mind
moderation of language; for dogmatic assertion and the arbitrary use of words
(which is indeed the only method now left them) rather than for fair argument. " Consciousness is Professor Boune, of Boston, says the specific feature of all mental states. Unconscious
:
knowing and
pretation.
willing are phrases which defy It is indeed possible that the soul
all
inter-
may
per-
form many unconscious functions, but they would have no mental claim." 1
1
Prof.
Boune
(72)
73
will first give his un(1895). denial of all unconscious mind, and then his qualified assertion (in the same work) of its action. Elsewhere
We
we
in
mind Professor Ladd so vigorously denies in theory) of the existence of what in the following words he
ridicules
:
"
To speak
as belonging to
mind
is
to use
p^ j^y
*
tion -
is
The attempt to form a quite unintelligible. metaphysical conception of mind which does
distinguishes
"
h
the ques-
a vain attempt."
To
the
inconceivable of
'
talk of unconscious
'
mental states
iron,'
2
is
to talk of
'
wooden
of the
unconis
scious conscious
as
it
were."
No
doubt this
so to
at all obvious
'
is
ness.
The
is
psychical
is
the conscious
all
true
mind
8
states
and
real
mental existences as
1
far as
known."
p. 395. p. 384.
Could
74
language be more emphatic, or the ancient shibboleth more rigidly adhered to ? But it would appear that even these phrases do not
carry conviction to the unconscious judgment of their author for to our astonishment he then writes as
;
[sic]
that
all
in such performances as these are quite unsatisfactory." 1 Professor Ladd thus appears almost equally emphatic upon both
sides.
well-known writer in Mind, Professor Ed. Mont" gomery, of California, adds his testimony. Every one feels that to speak of unconscious mental states is not
only to be uttering a paradox, but to be almost as preposterous as if we were to assert non-existent existence.
l
We
So also
is
will
now
Sully's works,
who
can unconsciously (or with his unconscious mind) contradict his conscious
f j
Prof. Sully.
exam pi e
10W a
man
assertions.
"
I hold that
it
is
"
Modern
science, physiological as well as psychological, is unable to advance any proof of unconscious elements or
2 Prof.
3
G. T. Ladd, Philosophy of Mind, p. 381. Ed. Montgomery, Mind, vol. vii., p. 531. Prof. Sully, Illusions, p. 335.
75
human mind."
is
statement
remarkable
such
an
able
man.
Every earnest psychologist must deeply regret the mischief wrought by this idea of unconscious mental
2 processes in contemporary psychology." And yet in these same works from which
"
we have
quoted, Professor Sully, while vigorously combating the idea of unconscious mind, unconsciously admits it by " his phraseology all through, e.g., The picture of
memory has unknowingly to myself been filled by this unconscious process of shifting and rearrangement ", 3 " The " unconscious process here is clearly psychical.
The
'
curious part
is
marks to " unconscious mind" in most places; in some few where the contradiction of the phrase is obvious, he
does.
Professor Eoyce, of California, writes as follows " If unconscious mind is meant matter
'
'
re'
'
'
by
we
But
'.
if
then the term seems equivalent to unFor no idea of a reason or conscious consciousness
of a thought can be formed in such wise as to separate reason and thought from consciousness. Thought is a
series of active conscious states
;
and
all
the ingenuity
of generations of
Von Hartmanns
corrupt our speculations with monstrous marriages of contradictory notions whereof the Philosophy of the
'
2 Prof. Sully, Pessimism, p. 193. Ibid., p. 194. 3 Prof. Sully, Illusions, p. 266.
76
Unconscious
This
is
a fine Cali-
fornian specimen of the vigorous dogmatic style. There is a long article against the unconscious
Royce, Hutd and Kin:he
'
mm d
we
by R. H. Hutton
in the Contemporary
ner
plied that
We
I do not think you can get the result of thinking of without thought of judging without judgment creative effort without the conscious adaptation of
; ;
ances. "
"I see nothing like latent or unbut thought thought, only unthought physical condimeans
to ends."
2
tions of thought."
"Is
it
not
fair
to conclude,
and find
it
shape in our minds, that the progress is probably due, not to unconscious cerebration, but to forgotten intervals of conscious intellectual
if
work ?
"
The reader
will
he sees much force in these arguments. say Dr. Ireland says " The theory of unconscious cerebration derives no support from physiology. It is a
:
and by the study and analysis of mental operations 5 cognisable by internal self-examination." Note specially that the main reasons why the unconrepelled
1
Prof. Royce,
2 R.
*
Mind,
and
in the
77
mind is denied by all these writers is because not appear to recognise any method of indo they vestigation but introspection, a process necessarily
conscious.
conclude this adverse testimony with the following from Kirchener " An unconscious consciousness we understand by
:
We
consciousness the self-perception which accompanies The question therefore is, Are there all psychic acts.
'
unconscious psychic acts ? Many psychologists since Leibnitz have declared themselves in favour of an
affirmative
answer.
Still
the proof
of
unconscious
psychical
phenomena
is difficult, for
in order to be ex-
perienced they must be known. But their defenders assert that certain facts of experience compel us to accept unconscious states as their cause or as their But what is adduced in proof fails in certainty.
effect.
That
a waiter was
awakened by a call or by his name but only by the word 'waiter,' proves nothing but that it was that which was so joined with his accustomed ideas and feelings as to be able to overcome his deep sleep. Certainly ideas and feelings call forth bodily movements unaccompanied by any direct experience of will. But these are processes which only belong to a part As little is proved by the examples of the psychic life. from which it has been desired to conclude that unconscious psychical acts are the effect of conscious
ones." 1
1
78
negative
sufficient
Unconscious
hearing,
we
some
& SStobe
physical.
of the side
away, and an indirect negative established, the chief one being to call its actions physical.
"
Consciousness
'
Unconscious
partly from the physical side, as excitation inadequate to a mental effort, and partly from the mental side, as
we may suggest anything, or than admit the heretical idea. sooner suppose anything, And yet the idea has an irresistible fascination for
In short,
it
appears,
psychologist has resolved psychological phenomena into simple elements, he casts a sly glance also upon the mechanism that elaborates in the un-
is
so inimitably expressed
by Kibot.
conscious depths of soul the impulses derived from external impressions." 2 " Pursuing the physical theory, Much of the brain's 3 activity is below the domain of consciousness". " Hamilton and a large number with him partly obliterate the dividing line between matter and mind
of
mind." 4
is
tion.
Few
1
are aware
how much
indebted
Prof. Baldwin, Handbook of Psychology, p. 58. 2 Prof. Ribot, German Psychology, p. 192. * D. Ferrier, Functions of the Brain, p. 294.
4 Prof.
Bascom
79
fortunate
phrase
1
and how
misleading
such
-
Unconscious
cerebration
the professor by giving a physical origin to unconscious mind but the fallacy of this is shown as
:
follows
Laycock
calls
of genous (apt to beget ideas) and kinetic (productive movement). " To believe that unconscious cereDr. Ireland says
:
due to unrecognised changes in the substance of the brain, and to hesitate to call them mental changes, is, as Sir Henry Holland has remarked,
bration
is
really
to suppose intellectual operations in which consciousness has no part, or an exclusion of mind from the
To call thought cerebration highest function of mind. man breathes, is not warranted by true philosophy.
He also observes that A man does not pulmonate." 3 can be conscious and not conscious of being conscious!" Dr. Ireland, it may be remarked, is really a strong
2
"
opponent
of
unconscious cerebration.
The
last sentence,
quote from other writers, is a clear illustration of the phrases which a man will use who, necessarily aware of the existence of the uncontogether with others
scious, refuses to recognise
it
4 as of mental quality.
we
It
would be better for many of these writers for such statements the old couplet
:
to substitute
Bascom (Boston), Comparative Psychology, p. 23. 3 Ibid., p. 221. Dr. Ireland, Blot on the Brain, pp. 216, 232. Dr. Ireland's phrase, however, refers to the actions of a fencer, and the " " more than in is rather here unconscious consciousness of intelligible use other writers.
1
Prof.
2 4
80
cannot
tell.
For boldness perhaps the following is unsurpassed But "Matter and the unconscious are the same". this is rebuked by Lewes.
:
"
When we
it
does not
2 imply that it is a purely physical process." " Are the processes of inferences which Again,
lie
out-
side consciousness
That there
these are accompanied by anything mental is wholly gratuitous, and since it contradicts our radical psychical
conception
is
to be rejected."
Yes
I
that
"
is
the reason
ception "
must be preserved
am
Unconscious-
admutedto
be psychical.
Hamilton, and to admit his unconscious mental modifications, in the only shape in w]a ci1 J can attach any very distinct meaning
i
to
them,
4
namely, unconscious
modification
of
the
nerves."
" such could be " mental Mr. Mill does not say, " besides all " modifications of nerves are unconscious.
How
"Having assumed
latter are controlled
to
make
more or
by sub-conscious, or
1 2 3
Prof. Hering,
W. Hamilton's Philosophy,
last edition,
p. 285.
81
unconscious processes of precisely the same kind as The work at conscious redintegration.
"
work which are wholly outside of consciousness." The pretension that there are unconscious ideas
arises in this
way
that in
many
come
...
which
In our
is
not
accompanied by some feeling of pleasure or pain. We are indeed accustomed to speak of this feeling when it
attains to a
certain degree.
some consciousness
etc.)
when he
of his organs (heart, stomach, head, does not notice them otherwise." 2
all
seems convenient to state as ^1!",' activity, functions of the nervous system all those and SuU yoperations which lie below that level. The
^^J
'
designation
unconscious cerebration
as
3
unobjectionable
'
2 3
Dr. G. Thompson, System of Psychology, p. 428. Kirchener, Psychology, p. 68. W. B. Carpenter, Mental Physiology, 4th edition,
r-n,
516, 517.
82
the
terms of metaphysics, if the principle be duly recognised and the enormous practical importance of directing the pre-conscious activity through the physical nature be admitted and acted on, especially in the
education of children."
The
Huxley,
well-known
in his
arguments
used
by
Professor
Lay
mental
origin of
many
and Pfluger's experiments on frogs, are all founded on the assumption, " no consciousness, no
fessor Goltz
mind
brain
".
He
(conscious
destroyed,
movements
ordinarily accounted volitional are accomplished, such as swallowing, moving with light, etc., and because
unconscious, concludes they are purely physical. All are, however, accounted for by unconscious mental
action.
observation of the frog deprived of its brain it can adapt its movements to the changed conditions in a way which, if consciousness and will
"
The
shows that
were concerned, would manifestly presuppose a perfect 2 knowledge of the position of the whole body."
As
we
ing:
"
Far down, so
1
to speak,
W.
Ed.
B. Carpenter,
v.
Mental Physiology, 4th edition, pp. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol.
83
consciousness, in the intricate formation ol ganglion and nerve fibres, the connections between the
emotion of esteem have been slowly woven through long ages of animal development." 1 "Connections between ideas and emotions being
idea of self
and
this
we presume,
one
a physical part
of those points in
psychical physiology that are not yet proven. Let us turn now to the affirmative side of the question.
full
We have in
and
an
earlier chapter
brought
Witriesgesin
PP ort of
II)'
U liL-UIl -
not be rebriefly
.
sciousmind Herbert
Spencer,
we
will,
however, give
as
Whewell,
Kant,
Clifford.
W.
0.
W.
Holmes, Galton,
Sully,
Thompson and James Ward the evidence of many others, such as Von Hartmann, Carpenter, Kant,
Carlyle, L. P. F. Kichter, A. Bain,
is
T. White, Barrett, Keid, Stewart, Jouffroy, Ferrier, etc., given elsewhere. It addition to these the principle
is
admitted by Herbert Spencer (Principles of our acceptance Psychology, vol. i.) in his accounting for
tacitly
of general axioms,
ceptions of
84
tions.
by
"
by
"
instinctive induction".
with Herbert Spencer. 1 All these expressions imply unconscious mental action and those who use them
clearly unconsciously
admit
it.
names
of psychologists,
metaphysicians,
servers are
all
philosophers
too broad and the results of its application too vast and
momentous
to be settled
school of thought.
scious acts of
generally refused in France and Britain, the position being "no modification of mind devoid of consciousness," though, as we have seen, this
is
mind
unconsciously constantly contradicted. In Germany, on the contrary, the doctrine is almost universally accepted, no philosopher of note rejecting it.
position
is
We proceed to
"
The
Heimhoitz,
Galton, Lewes,
give brief extracts. insensible perceptions are as important in pneumatology as corpuscles are in physics." " These unconscious acts of mind, called
Hamilton, Tuke,
HbtscIigII '
Holmes,
ences
"
Ah
Schelling says with approval, Leibnitz, in denkbar, was the first to assert the existence of un". 3
See W. K. Clifford in the Contemporary Review, Oct., 1874, pp. 712-717. See Leibnitz, Nouvcaux Essais, vol. ii. , chap. i. G. Schelling, pp. 103-115.
THE UNCONSCIOUS
"Perhaps the strongest
these
of
MINI)
85
mind
the level of consciousness." * " The vast multiplicity of mental operations that are
in simultaneous operation of
falls
experiments (in introspection) gave me an interesting view of the obscure depths of the mind
"The
of
which
"
little
conscious before."
of
There
numberless indications
mental
as a conscious process." 4 " class the changes in the sensorium under three
We
heads of varying relative intensity, and call them conThe two scious, sub-conscious and unconscious states.
first
are admitted
by
all
;
writers.
for the
to
The
last are
not only take place in the same organs as the others, but are shown to have the cardinal character of sentient states
actions." "
The
less
it
processes carries two important consequences. First, disproves the notion that psychology can be limited
1 F. Galton, Inquiry into the Human Faculty, p. 202. 3 Jbid., p. 186. *Ibid., p. 333. G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, prob. L, p. 20. 5 Ibid., prob. xi., p. 157.
86
fact when it passed unconscious^. Second, proves that psychology cannot be divorced from physiology without excluding all the processes known to be physiological and known to be unconscious." 1
logical
it
"
We
are
mind what
sciousness."
Sir
phenomena
of con-
Wm.
that the
Hamilton further asserts (lect. xviii.) mind exerts energies and is the subject of
'
that
is it
conscious.
activity of
intel-
lectual
the consciousness of the subject." 3 "No general fact is so well established by the experience of mankind or so universally accepted as a
guide in the
.life
affairs of life as
4
and action."
thought or inwithin our organism distinct from telligence working 5 that of our personality" (i.e., unconsciously).
"
It is a great source of error to believe that there is
" Below the threshold of consciousness," says Her" all bart, perceptions belong to the unseen perceptions of Leibnitz." " such cases have evidence of a
In
we
4 G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, prob. i., p. 19. B Sir W. Hamilton, Lectures on Metaphysics, vol. i., p. 348. 3 Hack Tuke, Diet, of Psychological Medicine, ert. 1892, vol. xi., pp. 133, 136. 4 Dr. T. Layc,ocJc, Mind and Brain, vol. i., p. 161. 6 Sir John Herschell, Lectures on Scientific Subjects, p. 412.
87
the
of
which
of
it
is
The
name
latent
consciousness, obscure perceptions, the hidden soul, unconscious cerebration, reflex action of the brain, has of
late years
emerged into general recognition in treatises " 1 on psychology and physiology Sully, who is generally an opponent, expresses no
!
doubt that there " are a number of mental processes of which we are unconscious ".
" Kant admits that unsays approvingly conscious sensations and obscure perceptions form the
Lewes
".
" Unconscious mental modifications do undoubtedly exist; that is, real mental actions, which,
Bastian,
though they do not reveal themselves in consciousness, seem to be in all other respects precisely similar to those
Maudsley, Ribot,Whittaker,
Ward,
'
which do so
Myers,
manifest themselves.
"
,-,
o ,, *
Thompson. *
The pre-conscious activity of mind, and the unconscious activity of mind which may perhaps now be deemed to be established, are surely facts of which the
most ardent introspective psychologist must admit that self-consciousness can give us no account." 4
psychical study of unconscious phenomena dates from scarcely half a century back, and is yet in
its first
5
'
The
stage."
facts of physiology
"
J
The
2
3 4
W. Holmes, Mechanism in Thought, p. 38. G. H. Lewes, Study of Psychology, p. 17. " C. Bastian on Consciousness," Journal of Mental Science, vol. xv., p. 519. 6 Ribot, Heredity, p. 220. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 20.
Prof. 0.
88
only forms a portion of the mental life that definite consciousness has a background of sub-consciousness and unconsciousness. At first it seems like a contradiction
.
psychology. The study of physiology was necessary to bring out clearly the conception of unconscious feelings
as factors in mental
"
phenomena."
Many
.
.
cept of unconsciousness
lately.
.
huve acquired new importance Psychologists no longer believe that all the
mental phenomena can be discovered by mental Eecent theories of the origin of the perintrospection.
factors of
ception of space, that of Lotze, for example, depend on the admission that there are unconscious elements in per2 ception derived from the muscular and organic sense." "The processes that go on outside of consciousness
that go on in
it."
"The
thesis of
tions,' as it
'
The hypothesis of sub-consciousness has been strangely misunderstood, and it would be hard to say at whose hands it has suffered most those of its exponents or its opponents. Half the difficulties are due to the
89
W.
His theory of conscious, supra-conscious operations. unconsciousness, which he calls sub-liminal consciousness, is best given in his
own
words.
suggest that each of us has an abiding psychoextensive than he knows. All logical activity far more
"I
is,
I hold, conscious
all
is
included in an active or
of our habitual conpotential memory below the rest this threshold, lies below For all which sciousness.
1
sub-liminal
'
seems the
fittest
word.
Unconscious or
I hold sub-conscious would be directly misleading. I so call if that the spectrum of consciousness, may
it,
is,
in the sub-liminal
self,
indefinitely extended at
both ends.
includes
At the
inferior or physical
end
(sub)
it
much
in the ordinary consciousness of an organism so advanced as man's. As to the superior or psychical end
(sitpra), it
includes an
unknown
category of impressions
which ordinary consciousness is incapable of receiving save as messages from the sub-liminal consciousness.
Varying our metaphor, the range
of sensation
covered
the range of by our ordinary consciousness resembles The range thermometer. in an ordinary temperature
is
but
a
*
small
segment
of
the
temperature
"
the
Cosmos."
Dr.
of
it.
Thompson admits
science
"
That there is an unconscious mind, therefore, we are forced to assume at the very threshold of mental
"
i
F.
W.
vii.,
p. 306.
90
science.
of unconscious
in terms of con-
Fortunately, in view of this last sentence, this is not a strictly scientific work, but we would point out to Dr. Thompson and others that, in ignoring unconsciousness
in mind,
and proclaiming its very existence impossible as so many do and in saying that, even if it did exist,
;
there
is
no
possibility
;
of
1
demonstrating
it,
as
Dr.
Thompson
does
they
al
rest
upon a
fallacy
we have
already exposed, namely, that the only method of ina vestigating mind is by conscious introspection
to
see,
most unconscious
not to
all
;
totally
many other channels of observation open to us, besides the results of indirect methods of deducand inference.
will
* ne
We
Practical
proceed to give one or two illustrations of action of the unconscious mind, and for
will
unconscious
tms purpose
f or
psjxho?
logists.
Thompson whom we
no thing
is
have just
criticised;
of unconscious
mind
every strong opponent of unconscious psychism (if may coin the word) himself gives evidence in
favour.
we
its
"I have had a feeling of the uselessness of all voluntary effort, and also that the matter was working itself
clear in
my
mind.
1
It has
many
times seemed to
me
91
was
hands
of a
the person not myself. In view of having to wait for result of these unconscious [!] processes, I have proved
the habit of getting together material in advance, and leaving the mass to digest itself till I am ready to write
about
it.
I delayed for a
month those
portions of this
work relating to attention, association, and representaI went to my library each morning and persetion.
vered
days
in
succession
Hartley, Mill, Bain, Spencer, Lewes, Paine, Hodgson, and then would sit looking out of the window at the
of nothing. I would park. I was conscious of thinking I wanted to watch and take my field-glasses people.
write, but could not, because I
was conscious
was
not yet in a proper mental state to say what ought to be said. One evening when reading the daily paper, the substance of what I have written flashed upon my
brain,
This
is
1 only a sample of many such experiences." " In writing this work I have been unable to arrange my knowledge of a subject for days and weeks until I
my
mind,
when
I took
my
pen and unhesitatingly wrote the result. I have by leading the (conscious) mind 2 as far away as possible from psychology."
I think our readers will agree that a more valuable testimony to unconscious mental action could hardly
be given, nor one more common in the experience of The most curious part of it is that the literary men.
1
Dr. G.
p. 432.
Ibid.
92
very psychology that states that there can be no science of unconscious mind, is itself largely written confessedly
by
its
When
mind
.
is
in
abeyance as in a
. .
dream
Its value in the spiritual
life.
.
emerges from its obscurity, and impressions unconsciously formed upon the brain are seen and
noticed for the
first
....
time
;
bare
the
sands.
In defective
when
the
weak, the power of the sub-conscious is remarkably seen. Miss Martineau tells us of an idiot who had his hands washed and his nails cut at 1110
is
conscious
mind
a.m., and who came of his own accord exactly at the same hour each day to have the operation repeated,
though he knew nothing consciously of time. In all spiritual and religious exercises, whether
anciently
present day, the greatest results are obtained as consciousness is wholly or partly in abeyance.
Professor Barrett says " The mysteriousness of our being is not confined to subtle physiological processes
'
:
'
which we have in common with all animal life. There are higher and more capacious powers wrapped up in our human personality than are expressed even by what we know of consciousness, will or reason. There are supernormal and transcendental powers of which, at
present,
we
and beyond
only catch occasional glimpses and behind the supernormal there are fathomless
;
93
or faint representation
which our consciousness is but the reflection Into such lofty themes I do
'.
not propose to enter, they must be for ever beyond the within the scope of human inquiry nor is it possible
;
limits of this paper to give any adequate conception of those mysterious regions of our complex personality,
to,
scientific investigation."
services
the
"deepening
of
the
to be noted how prominent Recognised b teilchers the "cessation of effort," ? to a place given to the "casting out of self," to "lying passive," and
spiritual life
is
it is
-
"yielding
up our powers,"
etc.
The
larger and
more
our physical life, is potent part of our spiritual, as of behind the veil of our normal consciousness, and beyond
our highest intellectual capacity. Kingsley says "It leads to the mistaking conscious emotions for the
:
Workings
ness
".
1
which must be above consciouswell-known Christian teacher, the Kev. Dr. Andrew Murray, writes " Deeper down than where the
of the Spirit,
soul with
its
is
spirit
matter linking
the
man
with
God
mind and
life
feelings or will
the hidden
Our conscious mind, as compared with the unconscious mind, has been likened to the visible
spectrum r
of the sun's rays, as
to
the invisible part which stretches indefinitely know now that the chief part of on either side.
We
i.,
p. 102.
94
heat comes from the ultra-red rays that show no light and the main part of the chemical changes in the
vegetable world are the results of the ultra-violet rays at the other end of the spectrum, which are equally
invisible to the eye,
Indeed, as these invisible rays extend indefinitely on both sides of the visible spectrum, so we may say that the mind includes not only the visible or
potent
effects.
conscious part, and what we have termed the subconscious, that lies below or at the red end, but the supra-conscious mind that lies beyond at the other end
all those regions of higher soul and spirit life, of which we are only at times vaguely conscious, but which always exist, and link us on to eternal verities,
on the one
side, as surely as
the sub-conscious
mind
links us to the
The mind,
Activities
indeed, reaches
0n 0ne
and organisms.
.
^^
**
on the other
it
whose
call purposive originates. the supra-conscious mind the sphere of the spirit life, the sub-conscious the sphere of the body life, and the conscious mind the middle region where both meet.
life
We may
and His presence is not the subject of direct consciousness. We would include, therefore, in
is
The
Spirit of
God
yet, as
we have
seen,
the supra-conscious,
such spiritual ideas, together with conscience the voice of God, as Max Muller calls
all
it which
Moresurely a half-conscious faculty. over, the supra-conscious, like the sub-conscious, is, as
is
95
apprehended when the conscious mind is not active. Visions, meditations, prayers and even dreams have been undoubtedly occasions of spiritual revelations.
xii. 2,
1 Cor.
ii.
3-5
2 Cor.
iv. 7,
16
2 Cor.
may be adduced as instances of the working of the Spirit apart from the action of reason or mind.
The
truth apparently
is
that the
mind
as a
whole
is
in
an unconscious
its
middle registers,
excluding the highest spiritual and lowest physical manifestations, are fitfully illuminated in varying degree by consciousness and that it is to this illuminated part " of the dial that the word mind," which rightly appertains to the whole, has been limited. A writer in
;
Mind supports the idea of supra-consciousness when he says " There are operations in us which transcend
:
the limitations of ordinary faculties of cognition and which yet remain, not below the threshold, but rather
".
Let us continue.
"
of
thought
is
often singularly
Further testimony of
favoured by J the fact of listening & to a weak continuous discourse (sermon ?) with just
enough ideas
in
it
to
mind
busy.
rapid and
inducing current."
The
writer, in
readers,
common no doubt with many of his must confess experience of the above, which
1
W.
xii., p.
271.
p. 292.
when compelled to sit The idea of an " induced curout vapid discourses. " is most felicitous. rent
" G. H. Lewes points out that the same physiological effects accompany the conscious and unconscious state.
Every sense
of impulse,
effects circulation
Dr. H. Munsterberg's interesting experiment on apperception shows work performed unconsciously which has all the character of wc^k which, before the formation of habit, consciousness can alone effect
;
and
also
varying complexity are performed unconsciously contrasted with the varying time they require if perof
formed consciously.
"
The whole
is
weh worth
reading.
consciousness,
elaborates
material
unconsciously,
calls latent
but
it
powers into activity without consciousness, responds also as an organ of organic life to the
internal stimuli
which
it
The
so-called pre-conscious
is
soul of which
some
does
indesd
is
knowledge
seem probable that unconscious never acquired save as result of habit and
p. 35.
Ibid., p. 366.
97
Many educated
is
persons
know
four languages.
This
which
an underestimate.
These words
are as arbitrary symbols as signs in algebra. Then consider the countless facts and ideas bound up with
Such a mind
is
richly stocked with words and ideas than the British Museum is with books. The British Museum
more
hunt in catalogues and shelves of perhaps ten minutes, any book wanted. But the single
will produce, after a
unconscious librarian
who
waits our
orders in
the
crowded chambers of our memory is far more speedy and skilful in his service. A student reads a page of
French or German
in a minute,
and
200
or 300 groups of hieroglyphics printed on it, the unconscious instantly furnishes us with whatever we call for
;
its
etymology, its English equivalent, or any associated ideas connected with it. have no con-
meaning,
its
We
It is
enough we want
the point to be remembered, and instaHtly it is produced out of the vast repository. I think this single illustration sufficient proof of the presence
unconscious.
is
Prof.
p. 457.
CHAPTEE
CONSCIOUS.
V.
In
we
lastly,
further evidence as to the importance of the latter. As to degrees of unconsciousness. Degrees of " unconsciousThere are three degrees of latency of
ness.
consciousness.
"
1.
The
sphere of consciousness.
2. Extraordinary knowledge of which we are wholly unconscious in ordinary states is brought to light in
"
sickness, fever,
madness,
fits,
etc.
"3.
Mental
activities of
we
"
are conscious."
Mental changes,
1
of
whose
we subsequently
Logic, vol.
i.,
Sir
W. Hamilton,
Lectures on Metaphysics
p. 34.
(98)
99
of con-
do not overlook the fact that some writers suppose these unconscious states not to be entirely unBut if this were granted it would not conscious. matter much. It would only prove that the mind may do the work with a consciousness so slight as to be
I
almost
nil.
uncon-
By
de-
fining,
mind
phenomena
the mental
to be the subject of the various internal of which we are conscious, he leaves all
phenomena
;
of
and the existence of which he admits (supra) without any subject he does not deal with that substratum of
mentality which is beneath mentation or conscious mental function, and which is in the cerebral organisation. Cerebral mental function may be conscious or unconscious, active, sub-active, or in abeyance and it is
;
only
etc.,
when
of thoughts, desires,
reaches a certain height of energy that these functhat they in fact function as tions become conscious
consciousness."
Sir
third
William Hamilton says further referring to the degree of unconsciousness of which we have
:
spoken
1
W.
p. 26.
edition, p. 516
100
"Are
(i.e.,
unconscious, but which manifest their existence by I do not hesitate effects of which we are conscious ?
to affirm that
what we
are conscious of
is
constructed
out of what
we
are not
conscious
of.
Thus those
we
modifications of
sciousness."
"
*
mind what
phenomena
of con-
Consciousness arises
midway between
ancestrally
organic unconscious nerve movements, and experimentally organic unconscious nerve movements. The
difference
action
action.
is
We
Conscious
All vertebrata normally have consciousness." 2 now proceed to give evidence in the way in
itself
in
^scfous
mhld
-
Cardinal
Newman
;
die
down
mental operations alter our beliefs. " An assent sometimes dies out without tangible reasons sufficient to account for its failure." 3
"
We
by a
feeling
which has
i.,
p. 348.
101
our suspecting it and suddenly there falls, as it were, One has only to remember how scales from our eyes
often the souls of pure girls are completely possessed by a first love which they would with a good conscience
deny
but should the unconsciously loved one incur a danger, then she knows at that same moment that she
;
loves
Mechanism of
Life, says
"As
the
many processes go on
in the
unknown
to
or at any rate performed without foresight and calculation, have yet, as their direct and necessary
result,
conscious perception and volition, which the wisest reflection could not make more effective for
their ends
'.
"
The notion
of the
by Perty who
ments.
'
finds himself
drawn on to a moveadmits
on the unconscious.
And
likewise
Wundt, who
the necessity of referring the origin of sensuous perceptions and of consciousness in general to unconscious are logical processes, since the processes of perception of an unconscious nature, and only their results are
wont
to appear in consciousness.
The
suggestion of
the logical character of the processes of perception of a very wellpossesses the essential requirements the simplest at once be That would grounded theory.
facts
The
first
act of appre-
Ed.
v.
vol. L, p. 259.
102
there
is
thinking.
We
believe that
we have hereby
completely
proved that the assumption of unconscious logical processes is not merely competent to explain the results of
the processes of perception, but that it, in fact, also correctly declares the real nature of these processes, although the processes themselves are not accessible to
immediate observation.
"
'
The unconscious
on
where there exists the possibility of error. Our mind is so happily designed that it prepares for us the most important foundations of cognition, whilst we have
possible
not the slightest apprehension of the modus operandi. This unconscious soul, like a benevolent stranger, works
and makes provision for our mature fruits into our laps.' "
benefit,
1
We now give
Illustrations
f
of
our readers
may
recognise
" Influence (conscious) is entirely the result of unconscious knowledge." "Intimations reach our consciousness
from
unconsciousness,
is
that
the
mind
is
full of ideas."
"Thinking
humming
a tune
is
See Wundt, Beitrage zur theorie der Sinnes Vermehrung, p. 169, 375, by Ed. v. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, p. 39.
103
"After being raised to a higher rank (baronetcy or peerage) the whole behaviour subtly and unconsciously changes in accordance with it."
instance."
'
(This
styles
is
and
Quite unconsciously we change our behaviour, carriage and style to suit the circumstance.)
"
The grounds
so remote
of our judgment are often knowledge from consciousness that we cannot bring
'"
them
into view."
;
unconscious part
that part are proximate causes of consciousness that the greater part of human intuitional action is an effect
of an unconscious cause
tions
is
the truth of these proposiso deducible from ordinary mental events and so near the surface that the failure of deduction to
;
is
forestall
it
may
well
excite wonder."
"
Our behaviour
sumptions respecting our own social and intellectual In comrank, and that of the one we are addressing.
pany we unconsciously assume a bearing based on unconscious data quite different from the home circle."
(See
supra.)
gives rise to
"
To
1
return to
Anon.,
Ibid.
known
psychologists.
"
104
il
of the
Illustrations
-,
<
know nothing
at
n
all
Montgomery,
us after
as
Carpenter stated that when the solution of a problem he had long vainly dealt with flashed across his mind, he trembled as if in the presfriend
ot
Dr.
ence of another being who had communicated a secret to him. " A close attention to our internal operations, along with induction, gives us this result, that we even exercise ratiocination of
furnishes us with this marvellous law, that every operation whatsoever of our minds is unit
and generally
known
"
it
to us."
That the soul may act without being conscious of what it does and that these unconscious acts affect those acts of which it is conscious has been already
established."
3
may give the following interesting example of the practical value of this
.
We
1
v.
by Ed.
Hartmann, Philosophy of
the
Un-
Rosmini, Psycologia,
vol-
Noah
Porter,
Human
105
. .
.
and are
processes
The mental
in-
is
Its
most
striking
form
is
are so often
made by
There
is
no
explicit
;
but a thinking out of matters by, say, a bricklayer kind of almost instinctive realising that such materials
will
results.
The
individual
himself regards the whole matter as one of doing and not of thinking." l " The unconscious motive power in all actions is to
2 seek pleasure and avoid pain." " Hence the mental process must be wholly depenon an actuating subto subsistence for its dent origin
how premises which lie below sustain conclusions in consciousness can consciousness how the mind can wittingly take up a mental move;
ment
steps.
at
.
an advanced stage, having missed its primary "We shall, therefore, in oversight of all this
.
accumulated
proceed,"
etc.
rubbish
4
of
sub-conscious
phenomena,
Certain ima truly remarkable sentence. portant phenomena occur and are not denied, but, because inexplicable, are to be entirely overlooked as
This
is
"
accumulated rubbish
".
differently
1
2 Jas.
3
See Prof. Holman, Introduction to Education, pp. 299, 300. " Ward, Encyclopedia Britannica, article Consciousness".
4 Prof.
Ed. Montgomery, Mind, vol. vii., p. 212. Bascom (Boston), Comparative Psychology, pp. 31-33.
106
"
of a
illustrations
row
one
"When
Ribot, Sully,
struck the
HoimS
"
'
and Child.
through all moves, the others remaining in their places." Something like this, he says, seems often to
'
7,
occur in a train of thought, one idea immediately sugthis suggestion passgests another into consciousness one or more ideas which do not themselves ing through
This point, that we are not conscious of the formation of groups, but only of a
rise into consciousness.'
formed group,
may throw
light
on the existence
of
Character
is
Motives are mediate causes, but the latter are the former is absoconscious, or liable to become so
action.
;
lutely unconscious."
recognise a man by gestures, etc., though popularly called a perception, is much more of an unfolded 3 process of conscious inference '."
"
To
'
We
We
and
will
now
illustrate the
way
in
which conscious
first of all
Unconscious
sdous^ctT"
feelings.
Let us
con-
the discomfort
is
conscious thought
1
107
be
made
surprising how uncomfortable a person may by the obscure idea of something which he
ought to have said or done, and which he cannot for the life of him remember. There is an effort of the
lost idea to get into consciousness,
which
is
1
relieved
" There are thoughts that never emerge into consciousness, which yet make their influence felt among
the perceptive mental currents just as the unseen 2 planets sway the movements of the known ones."
of a business
man
in
given up thinking of an important question as too much But he continued so uneasy in his brain for him.
palsy.
After
some
hours the natural solution of the question came to him, worked out, as he believed, in that troubled interval." 3
Last year the writer was driving to Phillimore Gardens to give some letters to a friend. On the p erS onai lllustratlons way a vague uneasiness sprang up, and a
-
"
I doubt
it
have
you took them out of the drawer specially ". The vague feeling was not satisfied, but could not reply. On arrival, he found the letters were in none of his On returning, they were found on the hall pockets.
;
where they had been placed a moment while putting on his gloves. The other day the writer had to go to see a patient
table,
1
Mandsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 290. Prof. 0. W. Holmes, Pages from Odd Volumes, p. 282.
Ibid.
p. 280.
108
very late, and did not stay but drove down to the Pavilion for the night, it being dark and rainy. Next
morning at eleven he walked up to find the house, knowing the general direction, though never having walked there before. He went up the main road, and,
after passing a certain turning,
began to
feel
a vague
uneasiness coming
into
consciousness,
that he had
passed the terrace. On asking the way, he found it was so and the turning was where the uneasiness
;
began.
was pitch dark and very wet, and anything seen from a close carriage was quite un-
The night
before
consciously impressed on his mind. now reach a very valuable and unique body of testimony to the action of the unconscious
We
Unique
evidence of unconscious
minH
rj-^g
mind
action.
200 American university students and probody fessional persons, 151 being men, and forty-nine being
of
women.
"21.
it
The answers
are
recorded and
given by
Professor Child.
When
to
you cannot
recall a
does
seem
To suggested by any perceived association of ideas ? " No," and 81 per cent, this, 11 per cent, answered
answered "Yes".
"22. Does such recovery ever come during sleep?" To this, 17 per cent, answered " No," and 60 per cent.
"Yes".
Examples given
109
name
of a character I
taught a class,
and, walking home in the afternoon, all the names recurred to me without effort. 2. I tried to recall the
name
of
a book.
Gave
it
up.
else,
Half an hour
blurted
it
after,
out without
23.
Have you
ever had
tion?"
*
invention flashed into consciousness as a clear concep32 percent, have had the conception, and of
it
seeing a sight for the first time, have you ever felt that you had seen (or heard) the name be" fore?" 59 per cent, answered Yes ".
perplexed at mathematical problems or other puzzles, have you left it, turned your attention elsewhere, and, after some time, found you could master
25.
it
"
When
easily ?
"
To
".
"
Yes,"
:
per cent.
"No
One gave
this illustration
and 12
"In writing music, I search in vain for a bass or chord. I go for a walk, and on return can write it
without
effort."
1
women showed
less experience
There
appears to be a decrease with increasing age in the conscious results of unconscious mind action. From
twenty-five to thirty there
of this power.
1
is
a constant interruption
ii.
110
We now
"Our
Source of
feelings.
idea a * once.
All other ideas are for the time are really existing,
but only potentially for consciousness, i.e., they hover, as it were, on our horizon, or beneath the threshold of
consciousness.
The
fact that
is simply explained by the fact that they have continued psychic existence and attention is sometimes voluntarily or involuntarily turned
return to consciousness
ideas
away from the present, and the reappearance of former 1 is thus made possible." The more thoroughly we examine the mechanism of thought, the more clear is it that not only automatic
but unconscious action enters largely into
all its
pro-
0.
"
Our
do not
know
something
carries us.
We
(our con-
The creating and scious selves) do not take the step. informing spirit, which is within us and not of us, is
recognised everywhere in real life. It comes to us as a voice that will be heard; it tells us what we must believe
;
it
we wonder
at this
2
visitor
who
I have desired to show how whole Galton says states of mental operation that have lapsed out of
light".
1
2
3
0. W. Holmes, Mechanism in Thought and Morals, p. 39. F. Galton, Inquiry into the Human Faculty, p. 202.
111
Montgomery observes
"We
are constantly
of uncon-
mental
unsolicited
by any previous
womb
sciousness ". " Indeed, all our most vivid feelings are thus mystiSuddenly a new irrelevant, unwilled, cally derived.
unlooked-for presence intrudes itself into consciousness. Some inscrutable power causes it to rise and
enter the mental presence as a sensorial constituent.
dependence on unconscious forces has to be conjectured with regard to the most vivid mental occurrences, how much more must such a sustaining foundaIf this vivid
tion be postulated for those faint revivals of previous sensations that so largely assist in making up our com1 plex mental presence " It has often happened to me," says Sir Benjamin " Brodie, to have accumulated a store of facts, but to
!
"
have been able to proceed no further. Then, after an interval of time, I have found the obscurity and confusion to have cleared
in their right places,
away
though I have not been sensible 2 made of having any effort for that purpose." " The traditional opinion that consciousness is the
entire
field
of the
internal
life
cannot be wundton
116
In consciousness, psychic acts JJ'th? accepted. and unconscl us. are very distinct from one another
.
. .
observation
itself
psychology.
1
2 Sir
Ed. Montgomery, Mind, vol vii. p. 212. B. C. Brodie, Psychological Inquiries, 2ud edition,
p. 20.
112
consciousness,
work done
in
unknown
laboratory beneath
mate analysis
unconscious
Suddenly a new thought springs into being. Ultiof psychic processes shows that the
is
the theatre of
the
most
is
phenomena. 1 upon the unconscious." Before passing on, we must call special attention to Wundt this profoundly true and important utterance. here states the real position and importance of the unconscious mind with great force and weight.
ditional
mental
The conscious
Again,
Hartmann
says
"What Schopenhauer
regularly happens to
calls
'unconscious rumination'
I
me when
of
.
After days, weeks, or previous opinions. months we find, to our great astonishment, that the
my
held up to that moment have been entirely rearranged, and that new ones have already become lodged there. This unconscious mental proold opinions
we had
and assimilation
case."
:
my own
Dependence
" Our conscious life is the Dr. Creighton remarks sum f these entrances and exits. Behind
^e
name
sce nes, as
'
reserv e
for
we which we
it
infer, '
call
there
'the
lies
a vast
unconscious,'
of prefixing
finding a
quoted by Ribot in
Ed. v.
Hartmann, Philosophy of
113
The basis of all that lies the negative particle. 1 mere is the behind the scene negative of consciousness." " Again, The process of reasoning adds nothing to
.
knowledge
It
was there before, and brings to conscious possession what before was unconscious." 2 " Mind can do its work without knowing it. Consciousness
is
agent that accomplishes it." " This unconscious life is constantly springing up to 4 sustain the conscious life."
"It
is
self
that Shake-
speare must have perceived, without effort, great truths which are hidden from the conscious mind of the student that Phidias fashioned marble and bronze that Kaphael painted Madonnas, and Beethoven com;
posed symphonies."
"
The mind
receives
data,
to
and elaborates them unconsciously by laws peculiar 6 itself, and the result merges into consciousness." Here is an instance
:
Hamilton discovered quaternions on On that day he was walking from 15th October, 1843. his observatory at Dublin, with Lady Hamilton, when, on reaching the bridge, he felt the galvanic circle of thought close,' and the sparks that fell from it were
Sir
"
W.
E.
'
C. Creighton, Unconscious
Memory,
p. 7.
2 8 4
6
Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 13. Maudsley, Mind, vol. xv., p. 171. Prof. Bascom (Boston), Comparative Psychology, L. Waldstein, The Sub-conscious Self, p. 23. Eibot, German Psyclwlogy p. 237.
p. 246.
114
j,
k, just
as
he
not
When
we do
; ;
perceive the thing and then feel the surprise but surso prise comes first, and then we search out its cause
that the theory must have acted on the unconscious mind to create the feeling, before being perceived in consciousness." 2
We
the two.
we have
of the
interdepend-
mysteiyof
that
all
^e
lie
k on d s
lie
consciousness
And what
find
mysteries
How we
sudden trouble reveals, even to ourselves, depths of affection we never knew we were capable of. Our
standard of ethics, our very character (which changes continually), our varying moods, all proceed from hid-
and how
psychology we are complex nature of our perthat part of our ego which is below
of experimental
from
its
obscurity.
may
quenches the feeble light of the stars, so the vivid streams of consciousness in our waking life must be
withdrawn or enfeebled, before the dim record heeded past impressions becomes apparent.
1
of
un-
Prof. 0.
Cardinal
p. 281.
115
We will
of the
the vafueofffe
unconscious part of the mind ""conscious. bears to the conscious part such a relation as the magic lantern bears to the luminous disc which it projects
;
part
whole practical
effect of
life
men,
is
an
consciousness as the
The education
that
is
therefore substantially the same The sub-consciand schools wherever colleges exist.
ous
less
however, which is built up out of that countmultitude of sub-conscious impressions from the surroundings, customs, language, and so many other
self,
widely different. An 'educated' Frenchman's opinion may be in no wise different from that of an educated Englishman or German. But when for any
sources,
is
reason, as through illness, his conscious self fails him, his sub-conscious asserts itself, and the national characteristics appear."
2
Here
is
an example
:
Dr. Carpenter
of
"ZerahColborn could instantaneously tell the square root of 106,929 as 327 and the cube root of 68,336,125
as 645.
1
Anon.,
2
A Study
in
116
He
immediately gave the factors of 247,483 as 941 and 263, which are the only two and asked then for those
;
answered none, it is a prime number. could not tell how the answer came into his mind.
of 36,083,
He He
We
now
Testimony from an
most remarkable and valuable passage from Ladd's most recent work (1875), who, as we have seen, is a vigorous supHere porter of the old and narrow school.
give a
.
he
is
admit thai
is
again forced, this time openly and deliberately, to much that is of most value in consciousness
derived from
what he
0)
calls
it
"
One (with a
conscious
".
capital
It
of
be well to stick to one's text, but the shifts one is put to at times in doing so are painful and in this case, we think most will agree, it would have
may
been better
to give
it
it
to admit
somewhat
"
)
or supernatural
("some One")
"
agencies.
thinker on any problem finds the truth shot up from the hidden depths below it appears presented for seizure to consciousness as the gift of the Unconscious
;
[sic].
hits of inventors,
mind
rather than consciously wrought out by it. Nor can one fail to notice as significant, the connection of
117
such experiences with the conditions and nature of If, then, credit is to be given, as 'tact,' of 'instinct'.
it
were, to the unconscious activities of our own mind for these results in consciousness which follow states
of unconsciousness,
indefinitely.
brilliant
impressive acts in consciousness undoubtedly belongs not to consciousness it belongs to somewhat or to some One of whose doings we, as con;
and
We may add
to our
remark that
.
it
is
mind must
of the
none can say necessarily remain indefinite i rm how high or how low it may reach. This
-i-i-
unconscious
*s
indefinite.
is,
its
will own nothing they cannot weigh and measure in some way or other. As to how far the unconscious powers of life that, as has
said,
who
been
corn,
can make eggs and feathers out of Indian and milk and beef and mutton out of grass, to
say nothing of directing those protective organisms recently revealed by Metchnikoff and others, are to be
considered within or beyond the lowest limit of unconscious mind, we do not therefore here press. It
is
enough
and
in the present
;
work
all
to establish
the fact
fea-
of its existence
more important
it is
tures
of
to
show
that in
respects
as
worthy
being called mind, as that which works in contherefore return to our first definition sciousness.
We
p. 393.
118
of
mind
"
the
sum
whether
conscious or unconscious
of the unconscious
seen
a remarkable
jg
mind
gane
man
one
of the
spectrum
way w aom
]
in insanity.
{,he
conscious
rules.
and
overpowering the conscious mind, produces ecstatic vision and phantasms, or coarse and sensual conduct. It is
remarkable to note in this connection, when reason is even partially dethroned, how the whole unconscious
mind can
with the lowest sensuality, as in some recent heresies. We conclude with the following from Maudsley
:
"
It is the
and conduct ". 1 "It has been previously said that mental processes do not necessarily imply consciousness it may now be affirmed that the most important part of mental action,
;
is
unconscious mental
activity."
fall ill,
the unconscious
becomes fatigued
".
This
partly
why
involuntary
muscles driven unconsciously do not get fatigued as the voluntary muscles soon do.
1
vol.
119
To what has been said of unconscious mental functions, this more may now be added, that the deep basis
of all
mental functions
lies
in the organic
is
1
life of
it
the
pro-
that in health
It may be worth while here, as a postscript to this short chapter, just to see how far we have got in the establishment of the presence and of evidence
powers
before
of the
all
unconscious
mmd
in
man.
given so
far.
Nearly
us.
The
the work of establishing the latter yet lies action in detail of the unconscious
mind
in habits, in education
and mental
training, in all
the various powers and parts of the body, in sickness and health, and in many other ways, all are as yet untouched still a foundation has been laid.
;
We have
of the
established,
we
trust
on credible and
credit-
its right to
be
so called.
brief
With
summary,
in the
words
of the writers, of
some
of
have produced evithe testimony already given. dence from known psychologists that the unconscious
We
mind
the secret source of apperception (Bowen), the fundamental source of all mental operation (Rosmini),
is
the unconscious motive power in all actions (Jas. Ward), the basis of all mind action (Montgomery), the immediate cause of all voluntary action
(Eibot), the vast
accomplishes
1
all
being
120
merely the
(Maudsley) the uniting agent in all separate acts of consciousness (Wundt), the basis on which the conscious always depends (Wundt), the
conscious activity (Bascom), the elaborator and arranger of all data and facts (Kibot,
ceaseless spring
of
etc.),
the source of
inventions, of our
(Ladd), the source of genius, instinct, tact, love of the (Von Hartmann), the basis
all
(Maudsley), the most important part of mental action, the essential process on which thinking depends (Maudsley), the deep basis
of
of
all
sideration than
it
;
any psychologist relinquish their narrow prejudices, and seriously take up the study of this great subject in a worthy manner,
a
has ever yet received at the hands of and we are convinced that once these
new
dawned
it
will
have been placed on a broad and impregnable basis, and rescued from the opprobrium and contempt that at
present
it
excites in so
many
quarters.
poor monograph by an unscientific pen, by any weight that may lie in its quotations, rather than by its arguments, helps in any way towards this great
If this
end,
it
will
fulfilled its
purpose.
CHAPTEK
Before
it
VI.
will
little
ofactlons
first
chapter
we
divided the brain into three regions, consisting respectively from below upwards of the medulla or lower brain,
the basal ganglia or mid brain, and the cortex or upper brain the last of which has long been proved to be
;
the sole sphere of conscious and voluntary action. Different classes of actions are associated with each
of these three brain regions.
now from
them The medulla or lower brain, therefore, is the excellence of what are known as natural reflex
(or
As we are regarding them the standpoint of consciousness we will class entirely with reference to this.
reperformed natural fl6XGS wholly unconsciously, and not only without conscious will, but beyond the power of our wills to
automatic)
...
actions
seat par
actions
Medulla and
control.
(See diagram.)
We
way
consciously respon-
122
On
will be
automatic reflexes concern the essential physical life of the body, such as the regulation of respiration, of circulation and the beating of the heart, of digestion, both
in its chemical
not reflected.
these actions reflex no physiologist for a momen SUpp 0S es that the nerve current
fc
current acting (efferent and motor) on the contrary, the transition from the reception of the message to the
is undoubtedly an extremely and one which, as we shall see complicated process, when we come to speak of the relation of the unconscious mind and the body, generally involves psychic
The most certain proof of the says inner psychical side of the reflex process is the teleoaction.
:
Hartmann
"
logical character of this reaction, which is expressed in the thorough-going purposiveness of the physiological
reflexes". 1
This being the case, it is a very significant commentary on the relative powers of the conscious and unconscious
minds that
all
life depends are placed under the control of the latter, the former being allowed no voice whatever.
In
many
scious of the effect produced as in palpitation of the acceleration of the circulation, etc. ; while in a heart,
1
we
are
con-
Ed.
v.
Hartmann, Philosophy of
iii.,
p. 232.
123
few others we can observe both the cause and effect, though without power over the unconscious action, as
in laughing
when
tickled, or in
blushing
when ashamed.
One or two, such as respiration, can also be conducted the conscious voluntarily, and up to a certain extent
will is allowed to interfere
matic
this,
reflex,
at a point
life,
prejudicial to
for
superiority;
to hold his
no voluntary
can enable a
man
breath beyond a certain point. Such then is the nature of actions performed by the different centres in the medulla or lower brain.
functions of the basal ganglia in mid brain and of the cortex or upper brain are not so clearly Mid brain
The
There are Sexesor'' distinguished from each other. Lablts two very distinct classes of actions that cor-
to these two higher divisions, conscious actions, the seat of which namely, voluntary is undoubtedly the cortex or surfaces of the two great
respond very
fairly
hemispheres of the brain, and those which form the and all comsubject of this chapter habits, instincts,
plicated
purposive actions, walking, speaking, etc. actions connected rather with the purposes of life than its existence, as are those in the medulla.
at
Most
of these actions, in
man
at
any
rate,
were
one time conducted within the sphere of clear consciousness, and were voluntary in
every
detail.
124
tary and the conscious element, until at last the very same actions were performed with greater accuracy
absolutely involuntarily, or unconsciously therein resembling in character the natural reflexes of the
;
medulla.
They
differ
in the fact
these
which
is
may
be called acquired or
Another difference between natural and acquired reflexes, already quoted in chapter iii. from Maudsley, is
that natural reflexes are outside consciousness because
it
has not yet risen, while acquired reflexes are out of consciousness because it has set. All acquired unconscious reflexes
(in
man
at
any
rate),
which natural
Now
The
seat of
acquired
which obviously must extent the be to a large sphere at any rate of & the action of the unconscious mind, it is clear
.
......
that
clear
it
is
it
is
for their
Disease in
man and
strated
is
this
much.
removed, voluntary action is abolished though the animal can fly, or walk, or balance itself, and utter
usual sounds, not voluntarily, but on being irritated. Further, when the mid brain is removed and the
left,
its
medulla only
all
lost,
and the
125
animal continues the bare process of life, together with the simplest reflex movements with the limbs.
Of course
of
artificial
all this
points to the
reflex
probably
acquired only we must notice that although the cortex is the only seat of voluntary and conscious action, there is no direct proof of which I am aware
;
or
actions
is,
it
We
voluntary actions are carried on by means of the upper brain, and natural reflexes by the lower, habits, etc.,
are probably carried, on by the
in the hemispheres as well.
mid
While thus'
"
classifying
actions
as
voluntary
all
and
the
which
all
The conclusion
life
is
mani-
and mental
activity,
fall
under the
No ganglionic cell is conception of reflex action. functional without a sufficient reason, which is called the stimulus, in the language of physiology; no volition
without motive, in the language of psychology." We have already alluded in the second chapter
also diagram) to Dr.
1
(see
motor
tion
of three
different lengths. 2
The
Ed. v. Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. iii., p. 226. Dr. Alexander Hill, "On Reflex Action," in Paper at Victoria Institute,
1893.
126
reflex go to and return from the medulla the next connected with unconscious acquired actions going to and returning from the mid brain while the longest
;
go
pat
to
voluntary motion.
of
and
clear,
"merest schoolboy"
indeed
is its
of ante-schoolboard days,
;
which
chief objection
take place and probably does, but it must be remembered that these three lengthening arcs are entirely of the nature of a clever scientific guess rather than of
The
that
fibres
show
(see chap,
ii.)
there
is
no
direct connection
which end or commence apparently in the or neuroglia ground substance. The idea is a good working hypothesis and by no
of brain cells,
means confined
;
to
if
and
classes
of
brain
we
of the
practical
.
division
of
three regions, with the corresponding three classes of action in the well-known phenomena of
drunkenness.
Alcohol, as pointed out by Dr. HughJackson and many others, paralyses the brain lings from above downwards.
127
paralysis does not supervene, but only general excitement of the nerve centres is seen. But if this is
exceeded, symptoms of paralysis of the cortex are evident in the loss of voluntary will power and conscious control over actions, consciousness being also
lost to a large extent
;
formance of
well-known
shows the paralysis has not as yet extended deeply enough to reach the mid brain or the cerebellum the
small hind brain that governs always unconsciously the equilibrium of the body. Here is an instance of
this state
:
lady engaged to play at a private concert took too much to drink at supper, and the result was, she not
only kept on playing too long when she returned to the piano, but whenever her ringers rested on the keys, she
started playing like an could not be stopped.
If
now more
;
takes place. As the cerebellum and the upright position, for some time a matter of difficulty, can now no longer be maintained
at
At the all, and the victim falls down on the floor. same time the mid brain shares the paralysis, and all The complicated though unconscious habits cease.
man no longer sings or talks or dances, but still. He is now " dead drunk," which means
whole
of the brain is temporarily paralysed
with the
128
exception of the medulla, which still quietly carries on the functions of life, and will continue to do so, because
at this stage the
man
always stops drinking and for a It is not because he wishes to, for
is
power
;
but
it is
paralysed, and he can no longer mechanically carry the poison to his lips. But for this thousands would
die of drink every night.
one simple physiological fact the arm is always paralysed before the paralysis has had time to reach the
medulla.
If
down
man is no longer dead drunk, but dead. So far we have only spoken of the activity of the mind as seen in actions, but we must point Habits of
succumbs, and the
thought.
ou nere
is
is
^ a ^g
p rocess
n ideas
and
very similar. the cortex if frequently repeated by degrees sphere habits and become more and more unbecome they
thoughts
Of
is
this
we
Habit in thought
as well
habit in action.
habit ?
with reference to
inanimate objects, and the word is no doubt to some extent inapplicable, and yet it is interesting to speculate on the extent of its sphere of action.
of
129
of
elements and
tt
of long-continued repetition forming at last habits with cast-iron bonds that cannot be broken?
...
Habit
in the
result originally
inorganic world.
Again, do
we not
something that speaks of habit, an adaptability of shape and crease from constant wearing and use, or of fittings and furniture, that cannot be seen in a new coat or in
lodgings?
property of
Does not an old violin that has been the some great master (not only made by some
its very fibres the habit of rehe struck, with far greater chords grand sounding ease than any instrument that had not acquired this " habit " by long use? Do not trees acquire Passing on to living things
habits of growth
from
their environment,
life
and in the
whole
reflexes or
Are the
rhythmic pulsations of the jelly-fish or the movements of an amoeba the outcome of purely reflex action, or were
they, as
Eomanes has
asked, at
first
voluntarily acquired
habits passing by long use into hereditary reflexes ? Habit in man, as generally understood, means an act
or thought or sensation, or any combination of these, simple or complicated, that has been sufficiently often
repeated to no longer require the same intelligence and will-power for its execution that was at first needed.
It
artificial reflex.
130
to be
Nearly all natural instincts in animals have thus formed as artificial reflexes in man. In man arti-
habits formed at will replace instincts of a fixed character, or, if you please, voluntary habits replace automatic habits. It is wonderful to note that even
ficial
suggested) long since into instincts or reflexes, can be modified It is the habit of all ova to build by environment.
(as
have passed
we have
organisms in accordance with certain exact laws. But the ovum of a working bee can be made to produce a
queen bee by altering the mother's food, and feeding her on royal bee bread.
The
force of habit
is,
is
only
potent in the body. No power of mind or will can stop the beating of the heart or the movement of the stomach, and a habit may be so formed as to be
almost as
Darwin found he had acquired, in common with most men, the habit of starting back at the sudden approach of danger and no amount of will-power could enable him to keep his face
difficult
to check.
pressed against the plate-glass front of the cage of the cobra in the Zoo while it struck at him, even though he exerted the full force of his will, and his reason told
is
what a
soldier will
do and
is
well drilled, compared with a raw that this statement is under rather one feels recruit,
131
for
he owes
is
all
his value to
broken by the will the lower centres rise up in rebellion so accustomed are they to the easy yoke of that which has been often
;
an established habit
repeated, that the effort of control required, as in the process of breaking a habit, over the lower centres, is
often extremely painful. In all cases of true artificial reflexes or habits the
will is the starting point,
tary action
at
first
takes place.
Formation of hablt
believe,
repeated continually until, as C. Bastian and others a well-defined brain path is physiologically
present in the brain, or, in the graphic language of Sir " The will, blundering at first in the Michael Foster
maze
of the
paths.
nervous network, gradually establishes easy When once this is effected the slightest im-
pulse seems to start the nerve current along the whole of the associated groups and produce the habitual
action.
follows
this
route
not
now
this
because
is
^rom habitual
use."
:
is
not discrimin-
even
is
if the fact of its operation be demonstrable, In the development of not a conscious state.
experience, processes which were at first unconscious in their operation, become by reflection conscious. On
the contrary, in the development of will, processes which were at first conscious become motor-intuitions which
132
The action which the was co-operation of two or originally guided by more senses now becomes so far independent of them
are
tion of a habit
jn
^e
fl rs f.
pj acej
If it
^q
ac tion
must never be
be the learning of some steps in dancing they should never be changed till fixed
Again, it is of great importance that the If the steps habit be taught and executed accurately are taught in a slovenly way they will always be executed in a slovenly manner.
Again, fresh nerve paths tend to consolidate apart from actual repetition. A new task learned in the
evening becomes easier to perform each morning than it was the night before, and easier still on Monday
morning than
it
The Ger-
far as to
we
learn to skate in
is
exactly meant is that, having been taught skating one winter, the impression deepens unconsciously all through the summer,
to
swim
in winter.
What
so that
off at
we
begin
much
we
left
the end of the preceding one. Attention in the formation of the habit seems greatly to deepen its impression on the brain and make it
much more
which
is
attention.
1
p. 155.
133
habit of average complication produces a sort of reflex peristaltic nerve current heResults of
A formed
of cells.
Sup-
formed
a question of learning the clog posing dance and alternately tapping the floor with the toe
is
and heel
like this
somewhat
VWA
j C
JJ
abode
the small letters being sensory, and the capitals motor The centres connected by the nerve threads of habit.
by placing the toe on the ground the nerve from a to A. Before the an by impulse along habit was formed this would be all, but now it is but
will starts this step
first link in a long connected chain, along which the nerve current passes with great rapidity. The moment the toe strikes the ground, the sensation is passed
the
and
this is reflected as a
motor
turn
of
This in
its
motion
understood
by the fiat of the will. (It must be these actual connecting lines or nerve
:
134
"A reflex
in
We
must
is
fix clearly
Unconsciousness
Once a habit
perfect action.
is
become automatic,
each stitch or
slowly,
letter,
you think about the formation of you have to work much more
liable to
make
mistakes.
fixed
habit
The more
is
thus deranged by volition. fixed a habit becomes, the less of the body to execute it, and thus a great economy of required
is
is
In commencing piano-playing, the young performer plays with her hands, and arms and body and legs and head, and often her tongue. As she
force
effected.
reflex, less
it
and
less of the
body
nothing but the hands and wrists that are engaged, the conscious brain
is
literally
something else Habit is thus of great economic value. altogether. Habit, which is physical memory, is of such importrest,
or thinking of
importance
of habit.
memory
is
Artilife
ficial
well formed.
In early
habit of reading aloud while keeping four balls He did not practise this for many
after thirty years
and yet
found he could
series, p. 97.
still
135
tries
who
still
more coughing,
by
reflex
Habits, in spite of
life
clearly
Ease and perfection in any pursuit entirely depend upon the degree in which it ceases to be Habit gives
connected with consciousness and
is
carried
ease
on sub-consciously.
depend
on the power
"
of the
only hampered
when
ready writer," as Miss Cobbe says, into the ink at the right time, to form of
the
words, and even to select different words to begin each sentence, and to avoid terminating them with prepositions, while all the time the conscious
mind
of the
writer
deeply occupied with the plot." The marvels of playing a brilliant piece on the piano, while at the
is
that Sir James Paget has pointed out that in rapid playing the finger moves twenty-four times a second, each movement involving at least three
when we remember
muscular
acts,
which,
if
136
when
current of sensation and ensuing motion never goes up to the cortex at all for orders from the " conscious mind, the action being " short-circuited in the middle brain or basal ganglia. And it is not
brain the
(See
Let us now consider a few leading habits mental, and moral. Physical
habits.
physical,
;
Physical habits are innumerable they extend through all our being, are insensibly being formed
whenever an act
them.
repeated sufficiently often, and are generally only recognised when it is too late to alter
is
They
are
amazing in
their intricacy
and
variety, as
when once
diffi-
and
The
it,"
old saying,
"
It's
or the couplet,
If at first
simply means,
" If a thing
a habit and you will accomplish it ". pass now to other actions of the unconscious
We
mind once performed within consciousness, but ^j^ ^y practice have become reflex in
character.
ideas,
We
all
and
all
relegate
137
habitual to material agencies, and deny altogether their mental character simply because they are unconscious. This is well answered as follows
:
"
That which
is
realisable
now, or capable
of being
recalled to consciousness,
so,
may
and yet the essential nerve actions themselves may still go on, and work their influence upon our fleeting
succession of conscious states.
call a
And
shall
we
cease to
its results)
psychical,
when by
that
I
it
what we
call
voluntary
Habit
stronger
actions
we do
hand
is
to will a result, as of
raising the
to the
it
mouth.
The
ease
with which we do
do
it
control the so-called voluntary muscles, but in their association by unconscious mental action for the
Where no such purpose by long established habit habit exists an action becomes well nigh impossible, however strongly it may be willed. By long habit,
hereditary in nature, we always swing our right with the movement of our left leg, and the left
arm arm
with the right leg. Let any one will the contrary, i.e., to move the right arm with the right leg, and vice versa,
and,
overcome this established habit, except most awkwardly, and for The intense difficulty of the one the shortest time.
find in the
is
effort of will
may
powerless to
C. Bastian,
p. 523.
138
themselves equally easy, are most striking. Let any one will to play the violin, or to skate, or
Habit can do more than will.
swim, or in short to do anything that requires ... the formation of habits, and they will see it
'
. .
impossible and that to do so at all a habit must necessarily be formed for the very purpose and then, behold the thing which was impossible to peris
;
!
form by conscious will-power is executed by unconFew of scious forces with almost contemptuous ease.
us
of habits
many
of our actions to
artificially
Let any
man
wash and
order,
dress himself in
will see
and he
what
difficulties arise.
He may
not
know
He
cannot
tell
which arm
He
which know.
put into his stockings first, but the feet Before I begin to dress, from long habit I am almost compelled to pull up the blind a certain exact
foot
is
height, and if I fail to do so, I feel an inward impulse that is not satisfied till it is obeyed.
Consider the habit of shooting the perfect ease with which the trained sportsman, the moment the grouse
rise,
aims and
fires
which in
earlier
139
a soldier becomes, so that be may carrying, as Huxley tells us, into the gutter if he hears the dropped unconsciously
" magic word 'Tenshun," which in his mind is so associated with his little finger and the seam of his trousers
that his hands at once
fall
But
still
time would
habits,
fail
"While consciousness
mation
of
an act of reason, when it has been done a thousand times and becomes habitual, it becomes unconscious." " When the
x
human
and
similar functions,
ing, thinking,
2
brain has, by a long routine of grown to a certain set form of feelaction, its
i.e.,
work
We may
and
effort of
add, our
or unhesitating
when
is
mind.
-i
Habits of thought then are as truly and readily and often unconsciously established as habits of body, and indeed the two are sometimes inscrutably mixed as in
;
character as displayed in handwriting as well as in the lines that habit has traced upon the face, rendering
We have physiognomy a true science. and here as habit means elsewhere habits,
1
also
ease.
ideal
Maudsley, Mind,
140
to
make
mory
it
to the expected
and unconscious.
is
If there is a
unconsciousness
as the
Time deadens sorrow. The thing becomes habitual. are accustomed to poor poverty, to food, smells and Other instances occur. Soldiers in war, sailors sights.
in a storm,
"It
is
nothing when
you're used to it." We will not now pursue the fascinating subject of the formation of these in detail for when we come to
;
speak development and training of the unconscious mind it will all come before us but will pass
of the
on
briefly to consider
drawbacks
.
for they J
have drawbacks.
It
Habit
is
economical.
man.
scribed as using the interest of nerve energy instead of the principal. The absence of fixed habits
is
misery, and
is
of character quite as
much
as deficient will-power.
Habit alone, as we have seen, enables things otherwise impossible to be accomplished, such as playing the flute, violin or piano. Bat for habit we should
spend a whole day in doing one or two things with great fatigue of mind and body, such as in the
continued
effort
to
1
balance
the
141
by sheer force
Habit gives speed, accuracy and ease. The will, we have seen, can only set habits in motion, and is powerless to act
exist.
The unconscious
ease of a well-formed habit has been well illustrated by fixing a wafer on a looking-glass, and while keeping the
The eyes eyes fixed on it, moving the head in a circle. will be seen to be moving in every part of the orbit, but
cannot otherwise be known to move at
conscious and without effort
plicated muscles that
is
all
so un-
the way,
are
all
Up
by heredity, beyond
bidextrous
is
is
formed by us by habit.
To
am-
not generally desirable. Specialism ^s everything in the body, and the habits that suit the right hand do not suit the left, nor the left the right.
The
right
left
is
hand
is
just as
with a fork.
certain measure of ambidexterity, but it is against the principle of true development, and is common in idiots.
After
much
itself to
the
new
which we should
Habit thus adapts us to our environment, without die. A bookbinder in a little den in
142
be as happy and healthy as a farm labourer in the Midlands. Each has become
Paternoster
adapted to
change
places,
Let them environment by habit. and the chances are both will die. Sir
us of some English greyhounds ex-
Charles Lyell
tells
produced pups which could course as well as the dogs of the country from a formed habit. Some habits are the
offspring of necessity, others of caprice.
But
Drawbacks
of habit.
there
is
drawIn
An
this.
suburban dwellings, with a garden and locked gate in front, there is often an arrangement by which the gate can be opened from the house by pulling a handle that
raises the gate latch. the gate bell rings in the hall it is equivalent to a sensation reaching a conscious brain. The maid then comes and looks out to see who
is
When
there before she pulls the handle. If it is a person she wishes to admit, she pulls the handle which lifts up the gate latch. The maid is the conscious mind which
considers the sensation received by the brain, and does not send a motor impulse until the will determines
what
shall be done.
This
is
action.
If,
girl fastens
the wire that should ring the bell round a pulley in the hall to the wire that opens the gate, the result will be
143
bell
when
of
man
no
This
is
the for-
only in the body it cannot once by the will but must be gradually formed by frequent repetition, and moreover is never a true mechanical or reflected action, but always involves
mation
an
artificial reflex,
be thus
made
at
a mental though
now
of
unconscious element.
the voluntary action were the maid could admit whom she pleased, and none could
The advantages
backs were
the
bell,
The drawenter without her knowledge and consent. it took her nearly all her time to answer
and the
man had
the gate. When the action is changed into a reflex one, the advantage is that the man is never kept waiting, for pulling the wire opens the gate, and the servant never
bell.
The disadvantage
is
she no
who
enters the
Habits thus
drill
may become
our masters.
Girls
who
Birmingham are said during their dinner hour as they pass along the streets to be
constantly continuing unconsciously the same move-
holes in buttons in
ments with
their fingers.
In habits muscles
the
may
hammer
is
in
making knives
out,
till
of cells
is
worn
writer's
cramp
another illustration.
may
be put in
wrong
stimuli.
When
dressing for
144
is
a terrible thing
is
.
and of a good of this, example ' & l a habit of when the tenacity firmly estabSwearing &
It is
lished.
a grave moral
when prayer
is
said
drawback when processes become mechanical by habit, by rote and not prayed it is
;
".
Habit blunts the consciousness both as to right and wrong and as to pleasure and pain, and when purely
automatic abolishes
with other sins.
it.
A man may
all
person travelling or yachting takes great pleasure at first, but if he is ever doing this and gets into habit of the thing, it loses its charm. the
in
it
occasionally played, but when are incessantly pursued, and an automatic habit is they established, a large amount of the pleasure goes.
Habit
year, for
may
some
induce error, as when at the close of the days, the same date is carried on into
Summing
reflex),
up,
old.
out of
one of the remainder (the artificial reflex) is being gradually formed during life out of the third by transforming voluntary conscious actions, thoughts and
ideas by frequent repetition into habits,
when they
be-
145
actions, thoughts and with the result that generally they proceed with greater ease and less mental and bodily fatigue the
:
10
CHAPTER
VII.
last chapter, in
Order of the
speaking of habit, we necessarily touched upon unconscious habits of thought, an(j s h owe(j how, by repetition, thought can
will now go further into proceed unconsciously. the subject first of all, once more briefly establishing
;
We
proceeding to give some descriptive illustration of their action. "We will then point out various qualities in character that depend upon them, entering with some
detail
finally will
mind As
ideas
in
memory and
in sleep.
to unconscious ideas,
,
Kant observes
.
,
Unconscious
therein seems to he a
ever,
"
we may
still
we
" It
to assert not
merely that
E. Kant, Anthropologic, p. 5.
(146)
ITS
QUALITIES
147
may
exist in the
be quickened into action and actuate without itself being attended to "}
may
"
an idea disappears from consciousness, it does not necessarily disappear entirely it may remain
;
When
latent
it
Moreover, or effect an upon other upon movement, may produce ideas, when thus active below the horizon of consciousness.
l
of consciousness.
behoves us to be on our guard against considering consciousness as co-extensive with ideational funcIt
"
tion."
Leibnitz says
we do
not
It is a great
no perception
in the
mind but that of which it is conscious." The working of unconscious ideas and their influence is well described by Ladd and others. "They occur " The influence which determines every andTome
chain of associated ideas
.
. .
in large
measure
to the
liminal,' or
below consciousness.
.
of every object
goes on
to a very large
some-
Ibid., p. 305.
Ibid., p. 305. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 289. * G. T. Ladd, Philosophy of Mind, 1895, p. 380.
148
" what and some One of the same previous chapter. Both escape by
The more we examine the mechanism of thought, the more we shall see that anterior unconscious action of the mind that enters largely into all its processes."
1
"
most do not always think most. I question whether persons who think most that is, have most conscious thought pass through their minds
People
talk
"
who
necessarily
when he
is
least
"
if
It
they acted at
all."
Men, without knowing why, follow a course for which good reasons exist. Nay, more. The practical instincts of mankind often work beneficially in actual
4 contradiction to their professed doctrines." They are, in short, better than their creeds
"
for
common-sense, one
Aristotelians,
is
scious mind.
We
will
illustrations of lt
give one or two illustrations of the action of unconscious ideas in every-day life. " is comvoracious
now
The most
plagiarist
monly
Prof. 0. W. Holmes, Pages from, Odd Volumes, p. 204. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 13.
ITS
QUALITIES
of
14y
creative
activity,
so far as consciousness
1
is
concerned, being
When
the
first,
waiting on a pier for a steamer, I went on to which was the wrong one. I came back and
waited, losing my boat, which was at another part of the pier, on account of the unconscious assumption I
this
room and leave by another door. Shortly after, I saw another man exactly like him do the same. It was the same man but I said it must be his twin brother, in the unconscious assumption that there was no exit for the first man but by the way he came (that by returning)." 3 " The firmest resolve or purpose sometimes vanishes issueless when it comes to the brink of an act, while
a
"I saw
man
enter a
the true will, which determines perhaps a different act, springs up suddenly out of the depths of the unconscious
4 nature, surprising and overcoming the conscious." In connection with this, our readers will remember
how many
somewhat similar process in their writings. You see as you read them that they are consciously determined to " mind is consciousness," support the definition that
but that their unconscious mind, which has a contrary conviction, and a determination perhaps to prove its own
1
2
s
Maudsley, of Mind, p. 33. " Physiology Anon., Study in Psychology," Macmillaris Magazine, 1882. 4 1882. Ibid., Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 417.
150
presence and power, continually gives them away by leading them unconsciously to use language and to
make admissions that postulate its existence. The depth of certain clear convictions, such
as
"
two
straight lines cannot enclose a space," lies deep in unconsciousness from transmitted impressions. Notice also the unconscious intellectual preadjust-
ment
of
mind
as
compared
with a church.
Proceeding to the enumeration of definite qualities an d characteristics arising from the unconinner consciousness.
sc ious
mind, we
"
fundamental
conscious.
intelli-
as
a rule, unconscious
desires
impulses are of
of
unconscious
Instinct
*
origin,
is
generally
"
an unconscious modification of
:
gence. Sully, however, says " Instincts are conscious, though not actuated by conscious purpose ". 2
Intuitive
insight
"
is
an instantaneous automatic or
of interpreting another's feelings.
" unconscious
mode
:
Carlyle says, speaking of a man with unconscious " intellectual powers Such a man's work grows up
unknown deep
life,
in
him ".
"We
an
by ascertaining the
as
influence
may
have on conscious
we
discover
invisible planet
We
*
by the perturbations it produces. infer the unconscious from its well ascertained
Sully,
Mind,
ITS
QUALITIES
their
151
We
discern
from
effects
unconscious
pleasure and
whence come
our
All instincts
unconscious depths of our being." l Von Hartmann denies unconscious memory, but exalts unconscious will. "Every act of will," he says, "is a
reflex act, therefore every reflex act is
an act
of will."
is
itself,
the result of
Our unconscious influence is the projection of our unconscious mind and personality un- unconscious
consciously
over
others.
This
acts
un-
inlluence -
consciously on their unconscious centres, producing effects in character and conduct, recognised in conFor instance, the entrance of a good sciousness.
man
into
room where
modify
unconsciously
and
whole
room.
Our minds
good or
purify cast
the
tone
of
of
the
shadows
which
we
but which
who
unconsciously
pass within
range. experience, and is common to all, though able with strong personalities.
their
This
is
a matter of daily
more
notice"
appass on to the interesting subject of perception" and its relation to the uncon- Appercepscious mind.
We now
For
this
subject
we
tl0n *
quote
152
Apperception is that psychic activity by which individual perception, ideas, or idea complexes are brought into relation with our previous intellectual and emotional life, assimilated with it, and thus raised to greater
clearness, activity
"
"
and
significance."
In
all
ordinary cases
we
by our
minds. Apperception seems to proceed of itself, without our express will, and not seldom even against our will." 2
own
In other words, to every object consciously perceived vividness of detail and stores of information are
added unconsciously from the stores conscious mind. I see a tiny rod of
laid
up
in the un-
steel at a distance,
and I
at
once
know it
is
and a point,
is
smooth and
a needle for sewing, has an eye brittle. All these ideas are
instantaneously added unconsciously to the conscious visual perception of the bit of steel this is apperception.
;
the assistance of unconscious spiritual elements standing near the threshold of consciousness,
"With
feel
we
dimly what relations exist between the new 3 perception and our former experiences."
"We
see
which
'
of
We
collect
our thoughts."
"A
1
ITS
QUALITIES
153
if, upon its entrance into consciousness, it more or less response i.e., calls up our ideas. Well-known perceptions are assimilated quickly. If, on the contrary, the new ... is but partly similar to that which we already know, then the apperception is completed but gradually, and we become con-
finds
scious of
"
it
as
mental labour."
It is an unconscious
faculty.
the purpose of apperception, Lazarus For the (unoffers a valuable aid to Herbart's view. ideas are the masses of the forces that conscious) guide
for
powers of the emotional soul (Gemmuth). To understand them means to recognise the deepest
secret
motives and causes of apperception." 2 " The soul naturally takes hold of a new impression fills consciousness, but there are also unwhich
.
.
conscious elements active in the process of apperception, which, with the contents of consciousness,
In the act of thinking, in all work conscious action of the mind is the inventing, constantly asserted and determined by reverberating
unconscious ideas."
may
The real creation, the thinking, finding, establishing. process of apperception on the creation of new formations takes place unconsciously."
1 3
2 Prof. Lange, Apperception, p. 43. Ibid., p. 268. Lazarus, quoted by Prof. Lange, Apperception, p. 267.
154
Here
source " It
:
is
obvious that mental events include unconUnconscious mental events are not scious events. confined to reception, termination and changes of unis
conscious
operations.
knowledge.
They include
redintegrative
luminous thing
sees,
they include the latent bearing of likeness on the mind, to which we are indebted for recognition, and from
visibilia
into bodies,
and bodies
They
process which begets our knowledge of primary kinds, l and our knowledge of our own customs." " Many a weak, obscure and fleeting perception
Value of apperception.
ness.
ear,
into obscurity hold it fast in consciousapperception "We see and hear, not only with the eye and
^ n0
but quite as much with the help of our present knowledge, with the apperceptive content of our own
mind."
have undoubtedly perceptions that are never Such, n account of flagging attention or perceived. of transient character, sink rapidly under the threshold
of consciousness."
3
"We
Let
was
The other day I give an instance of this. small country house driving by a strange road to a
me
my
2 Prof.
" Magazine, 1882. Anon., Study in Psychology," Macmillan's 3 Ibid., pp. 13, 14. Lange, Apperception, p. 21.
ITS
QUALITIES
155
to the
and went on deliberately without, in the least, recognising it and it was only when I reached a well-known
;
what appeared
incredible: that I
had
failed
house, because apperception had not been joined to perception. The new point of view had called up no association from the unconscious
to recognise
my own
mind. " There are innumerable perceptions of which we do not become conscious, on which all actions performed
without deliberation, as well as habits and passions,
l
depend."
do we, after a lapse of time, need to read an article of our own composition, and why does it then,
to our surprise, often
"
Why
make an impression quite differwe had when we wrote it ? trains of thought come to meet it,
This
last
memory
power r
of,
the unconscious
be remembered that in
Not only is the fact of the existence mind at all denied, but the action unconscious any of every faculty that might possibly be supposed to
can be assumed.
of
1
156
exhibit
its
carefully explained
by some other
hypothesis.
We
assert that
memory
is
but then
we must
we
the ideas persist as unconscious psychical phenomena? i.e., sensations fallen below the threshold of
1.
Do
consciousness
2.
or
they not exist at all as psychical phenomena, but are retained because of the persistence of certain
changes, traces, or dispositions in the nerve centres ? This is one of the " cruces of psychology ". " Objections," says Maudsley, "to the supposition of
Do
"Ideas," Herbert
Latent ideas
3
Spencer remarks, "are like the successive chords brought out from a piano.
to say that these in the piano chords thereafter exist passing
baveTXysieai basis.
-^-
n ^ ^ would be as proper
proper to say that passing ideas thereafter " But what about the x performer in the case of the piano and the brain respectively?
as
it
is
Where, in the illustration, is the equivalent of the harmonic conceptions in the performer's mind ? And there is this difference between the passing chords in the piano and in the brain, and it is of the essence of the matter, that in the former case the chords do pass and
1
vii.,
p. 485.
ITS
QUALITIES
157
leave no trace in the structure of the piano, while in the latter they do not, without leaving the most important after-effects in the structure of the brain.
Whence
due time, a considerable difference between a cultivated piano and a cultivated brain.
does arise, in
of latent
ideas
deavour to denote thereby an important something which Mr. Spencer's analogy leaves out of sight."
J
the power of retaining knowledge in the mind, but out of consciousness I say retaining know-
"
Memory
is
must ledge in the mind, but out of consciousness. further be endowed with a faculty of recalling it out of in short, reprounconsciousness into consciousness
;
We
ductive power."
Sir
is
William Hamilton, and is criticised by Bain, by " conservative faculty," thus writing on Hamilton's " Of conservation apart from reproduction, we know
:
nothing.
"
It is a nonentity."
Memory depends on a number of latent and involuntary physical conditions, as well as on a number of conscious and involuntary mental conditions." 3
"As
of
the seat of
memory
is
entirely
is
consciousness, the
mind
processes of direct revival, and they are not under voluntary control thus, we cannot help remembering that a boat is a boat or a fire is a fire, when we see
;
either."
8 *
Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 70. Bain, Senses and Intellect, 4th edition, Appendix, p. 697. R. II. Hutton, Contemporary Review, July, 1874, p. 204. Dr. Edridge Green, Memory, 2nd edition, p. 114.
158
As
clear.
is
quite
"
The
optic
seats of sensory
and motor memory respectively." 1 Again, "Memory becomes less conscious as it becomes
;
more complete
its
until,
when
it is
(in action) it
has reached
greatest perfection,
is
"Memory
6
ness.
The knowledge,
is,
for the
most
part, unconscious
moreover, there
;
is
often an interval between sight and recognition and conscious effort often fails in what is voluntary recalling
wanted, which, shortly afterwards, is suddenly presented by some unconscious mental process. " A
somnambulist
forgets,
illustrations of memory.
he does or says (latent being hypnotised, memoi y^ but can be made to recall and
all
repeat
all
he can do
by the simple assertion of the hypnotist that 4 so, and this without falling asleep again."
S.
:
The Eev. W.
Cornwall,
writes
St.
Peter,
early childhood I had two which I have seen hundreds of prominent day dreams, times in childhood.
"
1.
"In
church
2 3
4
Dr. Edridge Green, Memory, 2nd edition, p. 205. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 514.
Prof. Hering, liber das Gedachtniss, 1876. Prof. Bernheim, Suggestive Therapeutics, p. 146.
ITS QUALITIES
159
When an undergraduate at Oxford, my mother arhave ranged my going to Addenbury, where our family
been since 1800 at times, and where she had spent her This was the village of my dream. childhood.
"
2.
A large village
steps.
descended in
lands above. "
near the sea with a very steep hill, The houses in terraces with wood-
my
maternal ancestors had long lived (Carys) at Cary 1 Court. This was my second dream village."
testimony in favour of hereditary memory. In disease we get traces of the action of memory.
Creighton observes "Neurotics are those whose unconscious
:
"
memory
is
particularly strong
a far-reaching obser-
unconscious
vation that
we
on when memor y-
speaking
of the
Memory
Memory
is
tissues, and he says "nothing marks of life as a recrudescence in these diseases so generally the activities of cells, etc., reverting to modes of life
".
Memory
and
1
as
exhibited
in
habit,
is
we have
already
touched upon.
is
Here
its
action
entirely unconscious
Journal of Psychical Research Society, Dec, 1895, C. Creighton, Unconscious Memory, p. 102.
Ibid., p. 37.
160
assisted
of cells occupied in carrying out the habitual act of thought. A beautiful instance of the action of unconscious
Lines on unconscious
memory.
C.
.
Mason
in
Home Edu:
Of towns and cities I have owed to them, In hours of weariness, sensations sweet, Felt in the blood and felt along the heart, And passing even into my purer mind
With tranquil restoration feelings, too, Of unremembered pleasure such, perhaps, As have no slight or trivial influence
:
:
On
His
life,
amaz-
He
shows
truly
how
the thoughts
from the unconscious mind dilate the capillaries and quicken the circulation and the heart's action, before
they are perceived in consciousness.
strictest
scientific
"
He
talks with
accuracy of feelings of unremembered pleasure," or, in other words, of the physical effects of unconscious memory that have not yet penetrated into conscious recollection.
How
is
such an accurate description of what actually experienced, compared with the pedantry of
forcible is
1
ITS
QUALITIES
161
laboured abstract reasoning from false premises and "We appeal to the individual experifalse conclusions.
ence of our readers to corroborate the testimony of the poet to the remarkable and a priori unlikely fact, that
the feelings of
Turn now
sleep. r
mind
mind
sleep.
in
This again
.
for
them
to ex-
in
plain, even with the free use of sub-consciousness, obscure consciousness, sub-liminal conscious-
ness,
number
of
of mental activity during sleep, which give evidence of concentrated intellectual effort, such as a
examples
the results."
The
man
writer has
known an
as the result of a
self in a
to
himthe
dream.
subdued,
"
Wherever self-consciousness
is
when
retires to the
background,
emergence
p. 42.
of
other
1
me
'
of that large
11
162
of our
physical cause of sleep is thus lucidly explained Prof. Dercum. Like many other " lucid explanaby " tions of brain processes, the truth of it has yet to
The
By
manner
and
a
' :
The
explained in a very simple (?) cortical cells in the motor area have
sleep
is
dendrites
protoplasmic process extending downward through the white matter of the brain, the internal capsule, the crus, the pons, the medulla, and into the
spinal
cord,
where
it
tuft.
Here
it
horn
of the cord
probably one of contact, though that is not definitely known. If the nerve cells retract this contact is broken
the abnormal contraction of the nerve-process lieved for the time being contact once more
if
is
re"
takes
place.'
Evidently,
if
the neurons
are
functionally
in contact
;
must be
without
nerve
this,
consciousness
is
impossible.
When
is
it
the
cells
are
every
is,
them
to
remain
2
in contact.
tract,
When
sleep, supervenes."
2 Prof.
New
York, in British
ITS
QUALITIES
163
During sleep our thoughts range themselves anew. The powers of the unconscious mind can often do more in this way than the most arduous effort, in
arranging facts and ideas, in due proportions. Hence we like to sleep over a thing before deciding and
;
judgment often on the morrow. Our dreams often reproduce our natural character as
is
it
when not
The
difference is often
Few
of
of us but
must be
our characters asleep and awake. In dreams the natural deformities of our dispositions are
difference
which in waking life are modified or repressed and culture. consciousness by " The frequently immoral character of the unconscious
revealed,
mind
as seen in dreams, in
which we commit
all
sorts
the
way
if it
without compunction, tallies with the Kantian doctrine that the moral will is the true Homo Noumenon
of crimes
self of
man."
seen already that a uniform thought in consciousness soon sinks into the unconscious in the same
;
We have
a uniform sound
is
is
practically
it,
no sound.
At
first
our rest
hindered in sleep by
stops.
remembered that in chapter iv. we gave some most remarkable evidence from some unique 200 university students and professional men, mi'i^action inslee Pof whom 151 were men and forty-nine
It will be
1
164
women,
"
"
' '
by Professor Child.
sleep
:
We
now
'
give
1.
2.
'
Do you dream? 94 per cent, answered Yes Do you talk in sleep ? 48 per cent, answered
'.
' '
Of these, 37 No,' and 40 per cent, answered Yes '. per cent, can answer a question intelligently in sleep, 27 per cent, on any subject, 43 per cent, only on the
subject they are talking of in their sleep. " ' 3. Can you wake at a given hour, determined before going to sleep, without
'
before ?
answered
" 4.
'
No
'.
If
failure ?
69 per cent,
seldom
"
'
failed,
5.
Do you come
'
sciousness ?
gradually.
"Example 1. 'I had to give medicine every two hours exactly, to my wife. I am a very sound sleeper, but for six weeks I woke up every two hours, and never missed giving the medicine.'
"Example
"
2.
wake
five
minutes before
Example
to
3.
had had
I rose
little
and
I
went
fell
bed
asleep at once.
called.'
'During sleep, have you ever pursued a logical the steps train of thought and reached a conclusion
"6.
ITS
QUALITIES
165
this,
'.
Yes
59 per cent, answered No,' and 31 per cent. 17 per cent, say the conclusions are as good
or better than in
are less accurate.
"
waking
life,
Example
1.
'I
my sleep. On waking, I played the game over and it seemed consistent. I do not think I ever played that
game (though
not play
it
and I could
now.'
2.
"Example
'I
in algebra, have
'
have slept over an unsolved problem dreamt each step and remembered
them, and in the morning solved it easily."' " Example 3. In Worcester I read and scanned some
fifty lines of Virgil
felt tired,
but,
and remembered
but
on waking.'
"
'
Example 4.
had long
on the
credit side.
Saturday night I left the counting-house nervous and angry. In the night I dreamed I was in the office,
On
the ledger open, and I came to a small account having a debit balance of 2 10s. I looked over it, called myself
it
in
my
"
On Sunday
some
ladies
to go to church. Suddenly the dream flashed on me. I went for the keys and to the safe and got the books, turned to the folio in the ledger I had dreamed of.
my
"
Prof. Child,
166
think our readers will agree that it is impossible to overrate the importance of this evidence as
We
showing the action of the unconscious mind in sleep. " Mr. A. Brocklebank, 20 Marsdon Eoad, East Dulwich, S.E., lost a pocket-knife, and six months
after,
.
R. L. Stevensou and
it
At Morley's Hotel, at five on Tuesday, 29th Janufound I had lost a gold brooch at Swan & I sent I dreamt there, but it was not found. Edgar's. it was shut up in a certain page of The Queen newspaper. I went the next day the papers were moved, but I found and pointed out The Queen. There was my
ary, 1889, I
.
"
brooch."
E. L. Stevenson shows
in complexity with his
stories for publication,
life,
how
until,
his
dreams increased
to write
when he had
his dreams.
He
work
he got most of his ideas from says: "My Brownies (a new name
mind)
God
bless
them
who do
and in
I
one half
all
my
for
me
while I
am
fast asleep,
human
me
as well
when
wide awake and fondly suppose I do it for myself. I had long been wanting to write a book on man's double being. For two days I went about racking my
brains for a plot of any sort, and on the second night I dreamt the scene in Dr. Jehyll and Mr. Hyde at the
am
window
1
split in
two, in which
ITS
QUALITIES
167
Hyde, pursued, took the powder and underwent the change in the presence of his pursuer." " In Otalla, the Count,' the mother, Otalla's chamber, the meeting on the stairs, the broken window were all given me in bulk and detail, as I have tried to write
'
them."
>
Coleridge is said to have dreamed after dinner during and wrote it h a nap, i
'
"
Kubla Khan
n
,
"
down
line
by
line
when he awoke.
Coleridge,
Abercrombie,
distinguished lawyer had studied for One night his wife a most important case. days saw him rise up in the night, sit down, write a
"A
Lord Karnes.
long paper which he put in his desk, and returned to bed. Next morning, he told his wife he had a most
interesting
dream
luminous opinion on the case, and that he would give anything to recover the train of thought which had
occurred. She then directed him to the writing-desk, where he found all he had dreamt clearly and fully
written out."
Lord Karnes says: "There are various interesting operations of which we have no consciousness, and yet that they have existed is made known by their effects.
Often have I gone to bed with a confused notion of what I was studying, and have awakened in the morning
3 complete master of the subject." "We may conclude with a remarkable illustration of
1 R. L. Stevenson, Across the Plains, p. 240, etc Abercrombie, Intellectual Potcer, p. '234. Lord Kames, History 0/ Man, vol. iii., p. 105.
168
motor action
thirteen last
that occurred to
my
niece of
summer. She had been practising for a "shake" of great difficulty in a sonata with days very bad success. One night her mother who slept with her was awakened by feeling fingers on her face. She asked her daughter what she was doing. But the child was in a profound sleep, while the fingers of her right hand were incessantly practising the shake on her mother's face. Next day to the amazement of her
mistress she could play it perfectly. It will be observed that in these dream stories
we
have avoided, as far as possible, the more current ones, and give those that are well authenticated and directly
bear upon the action of the unconscious mind in sleep, showing, we think, not only its action, but its very remarkable powers, to which are due, to a far greater
extent than any of us are aware, some of the wisest utterances and writings of mankind. It is curious that Prof. Calderwood, whom we have
already quoted (p. 161) as testifying to remarkable mental activity in sleep, gets rid of any allowance of unconscious mind action by declaring that "the mind
is
Exwork can be
.
. .
We
merely quote
this to
resolutely deny conscious psychic action. " " is conscious while I am unconscious
!
My
p. 19.
Victoria Institute,
CHAPTER
In a new-born
is
VIII.
Ath 10
of the
body weight.
.
At the age
of
Physical de-
Seven years the weight of the bram already tails of young averages 40 ounces, and at about fourteen years the brain not unfrequently reaches the weight of 48
ounces.
The
brain of an adult
man
weighs from 48 to
the body weight. than the
50 ounces.
It is
from ^Vth to
-g^th of
considerably
more
At the
third
month
month. 1
comparatively
are wantlife.
many
week
2
of extra-uterine
The
cells
and
of a
new-born
infant, whilst
motor
See Kirke's Physiology', 10th edition, p. 536, etc. See W. Preyer, Mental Development of Childhood,
(169)
ro
tively simple,
and do not possess as many windings as are to be seen in the brains of a chimpanzee not more
than three or four years old." 1 " Flechsig has not hesitated to ascribe to the assothe highest order. He believes them to be parts of the central cortex engaged in the manifestations of the higher intelligence, such as
ciation
centres functions
of
but in the present state of our knowledge such conclusions are, of course,
reflection
;
quite speculative."
and
have given these facts and shall proceed to give a few more respecting the condition of the Interdependenceofmind brain at birth, before passing on to consider
. .
We
brain.
the more important part ot the subject ot the condition of the mind in infancy and this chapter The more the physical and psychical are childhood.
studied, the
more
;
seen they are correlated and and that the development of either
is
it
We
cannot trace
these relations yet in detail, but we know they exist, and that every psychic impulse leaves a physical trace
and implies some molecular change. This, then, is the reason why, in studying the mind at any age, the condition of the brain is of all importance.
We proceed
a child
"
When
is
its
Sir
Wm. Turner,
3
2 Ibid.
That
British Medical Journal, 21st August, 1897. is, are isolated with a protective sheath.
IN
THE CHILD
171
which are active as soon as they are born, and which can at once assume the characteristic attitude of the species, the fibres of the cerebrum are
in those animals
completely developed at the time of birth. Flechsig has also shown that the sensory paths myelinate before the motor tracts that the paths of transmission of
;
touch, and the other impulses conducted by the dorsal roots of the spinal nerves, are the first to become completely formed, whilst the fibres for auditory impulses
The
brain
is
composed
of cells
and nerve
fibres.
The
direct
non-branching.
cell to cell,
The
fibres,
stretching from
betweenthe neur0DS
-
and to be formed by repetition of the same sensations or actions or thoughts between the cells engaged
eating,
in these (see chap.
vi.).
basis of
memory and
of habit.
The most
recent re-
searches already quoted, however (see Sir W. G. Gowers, British Medical Journal, November, 1897, in chap, ii.),
throw a doubt upon any direct nerve between cell and cell. The neurons
branching
fibres)
fibre
(cells
connection
and their
seem now
other in the neuroglia, and any currents from cell to cell must be carried by the neuroglia in the absence of
actual fibres.
It will be
Sir
Wm,
172
veins
through the
necting capillaries being too small to be seen till the compound microscope appeared. In the same way,
further research
cells
may
with our
is
used, until
maximum
still,
At
all
cells
without any branching fibres, showing the limits of development have never yet been reached. It is possible,
however, that
many more
will be discovered, as
we have
ground substance or neuroglia, which was once considered homogeneous, but is now proved to
suggested, in the
be a network of strands of almost infinite tenuity. The brain of the new-born child is the outcome of
influence of
heredity.
heredity,
j
n ev ery
we
but read
it,
of the
tendencies on their mental side are doubtless represented on their physical side by brain paths and connections, already existing from birth
;
so that
no two
brains are exactly alike, but each contains those characteristics that contribute so largely to that individuality of character the infant soon displays.
I am glad to find that Dr. Schofield believes in the inheritance of habit, for habit can only be explained as
IN
THE CHILD
173
and
child its
the habit be transmissible from parent to transmission is due to the inheritance by the
if
by the muchto settle no need We its parent. longer try discussed question of whether acquired characters are
transmissible by looking out for cases in which gross anatomical changes, such as shoemaker's chest or carpenter's thumb, are inherited up to their parent's trade, but
we may
own
activities,
we
its
or action or
more
stance.
Maudsley says
it is
"
:
Of no mental
act can
we
say that
Mental acphysical
eflects -
'writ in water'. Every impression of sense upon the brain, every current of molecular activity from one to another part of the
brain, leaves behind
its
it
paS
some
after effect,
which renders
reproduction an easier matter." "Let an excitation take place in one of two nerve
by
side,
any
specific difference,
This physiological process is the physical basis of memory and is the foundation of
difference
1
between them.
Man,
p. 24.
Victoria
Institute.
174
Not only nervous system thus leave feelings of pleasure and pain, desires, etc. behind them their structural effects, and lay the founda-
the development of
tion (physically)
action."
of
modes
of
thought,
leave
feeling
and
"
their
mark
upon the brain and set up connection between the cells involved, so that the cerebrum grows to the uses it is
earliest
and most constantly put to." As thoughts thus all leave physical
it
traces behind
is is
obvious that our present consciousness at of small value in determining the developof the organ of mind.
We read
scores
of books, or learn languages, and afterwards not a word of the one or of the other may have any place in con-
sciousness.
is
traced
upon the brain probably as deeply and permanently as in those studies we remain conscious of. Greek and mathematics may all be forgotten, but their effect in
mous importance
So much
The child's Imnd
-
developing the brain structure remains, and the enorof this fact is obvious to all.
for the state of the brain in infancy.
With
be seen, but only divined," and Preyer con" It is hard to dewriting on the mind of our
We
life
do not touch here on the possible active mental those who wish to read
;
IN
THE CHILD
175
Three Tears of Childhood, pp. 1-6. When the child is born he is the product, mind and body, of the forces of heredity. Not only is his body,
but his rnind, the outcome of preceding generations of good and evil. His mind is no tabula rasa, but is
already thickly
cies of all kinds.
seeds, or at
actual diseases,
But
and
it is
this theory is now regarded as untenable, held there is nothing more than a tendency to
1 develop such qualities." Whatever mental tendencies do exist are obviously all in the unconscious mind, for conscious-
ness, as
such, can
in the
dawned
new-born
rigid
Speaking
it
limitation,
may
be said
is mentally the period of unconsciousness, childhood of consciousness, and puberty especially of self-consciousness, though, of course, its actual advent
is earlier.
There seems to be such a thing as hereditary memory. When we come to speak of the unconscious mind and reproduction, we will give instances of maternal influences.
Here
is
Prof.
Holman, Introduction
to
Education,
p. 450.
176
the other day one of those instances which form the precarious foundations for the doctrine of the transmi-
The eldest boy of a lady journalist, as gration of souls. soon as he could talk, continually kept speaking of his living in trees and eating a yellow, three-cornered fruit. " His younger brother always called his father baboo,"
an Indian
title,
generation of the family having been in India. As to sense development, the new-born child
Special
en-
its
hear-
sensesm
child
-
some time
the order of development being first the organic centres, next the lower psychic or unconscious, and last the cortical or higher conscious
afterwards
psychic centres.
The new-born
early in
life.
though
it
Smell
is
developed very
Preyer says cow's milk from breast milk by the smell before it tastes nurse's bosom by the it, and the mother's from the
first
day
after birth,
and distinguish
many
"
other things rightly by smell very early in life". 1 Taste is developed even earlier, the taste of sweet-
ness being present at birth, glycerine on the nipple often leading the infant to suck greedily, whereas a
little
expression
as truly as consciously in
an
adult.
Touch
1
is
early developed.
Nearly
all
the incipient
W.
'Ibid.
IN
THE CHILD
177
at first concentrated
may
while
it is
mind
for
mind
is
little
later on,
when
the child
is
two or three
months
old,
we
find further
dawnings
in unconscious-
ness of faculties that later on exist mainly in consciousness the will, for example.
:
The
its
has no
will.
Its
movements
and
The growth
fancy.
are, at first,
lm-
of will in in-
then instincts
and
These
though
first
voluntary.
by
little,
.
"
'
movements which
Will, in
at
first
its
become conscious and voluntary he holds to be also a matter form, negative of mechanism, voluntary and unconscious.
.
.
'.
Wundt, on the
is
no such
and involuntary consciousness." l But there is really no contradiction in Dr. Wuiidt's remark. Wundt says there is no involuntary conthing as purely reflex
sciousness, but Perez only speaks of involuntary unconsciousness,
which there
itself
would be in
1
12
178
not that
it
thing,
if
we
admit unconscious
volition.
object of Professor Tracy's work, he says, is to study what is the nature of the process by which the automatic and mechanical passes over into the con-
The
He knows nothing but the mechanical on the one hand and the conscious on the other, wholly ignoring the vast field of the unconscious mind, and those phenomena which, though
consciousness.
still
not in
Wundt
not.
"
We
development
of conscious-
of the physical
organism."
After three
months
a child can distinguish a friendly a child persistently holds its head it has begun to think.
when
following observations, by a father and mother, * tne ^ r own cm ld, will give a general idea of Mental deveiopmentup ^e development of the various mental facul-
The
months.
ties,
to the time
child
the record was written, when the was between twelve and fourteen months old.
when
Some
1
of these
phenomena
in consciousness, but
Prof. Baldwin,
IN
THE CHILD
179
not attempt in a record like this to distinguish which are which, though the two classes are quite apparent. " He has now (at about one year) reached Sight.
s pe ciai
-
senses objects which he has thrown dowu, observing no doubt the effects of the law of gravity finds great pleasure in throwing a ball about the room, and then,
;
crawling after
it,
throws
it
fairly well
towards another
person, sees well through the window, first recognising his father through the dining-room window at eleven
old.
atten-
drawn by the
How
When
far
he
ten
months
the sight of a turquoise blue vase, but at no other, and at thirteen months would point to the blue side of a
cube
"
He turns Hearing.
in
when asked
to do so.
to the clock
when
it
strikes
and
window when
vehicles pass.
He
making any kind of noise with his delights hands on the piano or with the poker on the floor.
Two months
sound
of
'
ago he would enjoy a song, and the first Sur le pont d'Avignon would set him off dancing when held up by the arms. This lasted about a month, but music seems to give him no pleasure
'
whatever now.
"
Touch.
first
carefully
then taking hold and sticking, the lastly throwing tp ground has always preferred hard things to soft, and smooth to rough.
with his
finger,
180
"
oil,
first
dose of castor
months,
two or three
still
doses, liked
soap and not jam, but he sees the clearly superiority of cake to bread, and his feelings on the subject are plainly expressed on the
iron.
likes
and
He
countenance, as well as by impatient movements and sounds. " Smell. He has given up putting flowers into his mouth, except for the fun of having them pulled out.
He
of
them out
Emotional
nature.
to others to smell.
days he threw up hi s hands with a cry at the sound of a loud thunderclap, but this did not prevent him
from going on with his bottle has often been startled by something new, e.g., by his father sneezing when barely twelve months, by the sight of a cat at eleven months. At eight and a half months he was terrified
at the sight of a
continue to keep his eyes fixed upon him with a look of In the last few days he has shown apprehension.
alarm at a black bag, more at a mechanical ostrich moving along the floor, and in crawling along
slight
is
afraid to
approach a
Cases
like these,
IN
THE CHILD
181
Anger.
young children, must be taken, as showing an hereditary fear. This is not mentioned by Preyer, but
in
distinct signs of
We
He
it in his boy before four have not seen many traces of it yet has shown signs of impatience, he has
his nurse,
waking up and seeing his mother instead of and he has turned his head away from her
with a look of aversion, after having been made to do something which he disliked.
Grasping Objects. Putting out the hands for this purpose is an action very gradually developed. p urpos ve actlons At seven and a half months he did it with
i
-
"
and show great delight in holding two things in one hand. He now no longer stretches out his hands to-
wards distant
towards such as
may
be brought to him.
up small most not with crumbs. He is generally toys, pleased, but with things of unmanageable size, such as the fireHe will look very grave and irons or his own chair.
intent while he examines them.
"Learning
back.
to
Sit
and Stand.
At
seventeen days he
side to
At
five
partly lifted
himself into a sitting posture, and on being supported with a pillow was much pleased. He cannot walk yet,
less
when he
began
to crawl.
182
"
Pat-a-cake.
He
tempt
months
old,
and then
with the palm of the left hand on the back of the right. At twelve months three days he put the two palms together.
much
;
appreciated a
game
months he would try to play at it by imitation, holding up a fan, and looking roguishly under it, but never
quite hiding his face. " Imitation of Sounds.
At
'
just thirteen
months he
enjoyed
much
repeating
'
it
when
asked,
How
first
did
grandmamma
was noted
first
cough ?
"
Expressive Movements.
His
The
tear
'
at
Expression of emotions
smile at
of
seventy-five.
tear
and
to
it
him by the agonies of being photographed, was long before another was seen. As Preyer
much, according At 120 days what we understand by the word. he clearly recognised his nurse when she came into
room, and smiled at her while still taking his Affection he expresses by gently laying his bottle.
the
face
wilfulness by straightening of
By means of gestures, with the help of which more presently, he makes one under-
stand everything he really wants, putting out his hands towards the desired object or the person that he wishes On obtaining what he wants, he will to take him up.
IN
THE CHILD
183
shake with delight from top to toe, but docs not utter a shrill scream, as he did a month ago. When the upstairs bell rings he knows that it is for him to be
if
and makes scolding noises if he is not down at Two days ago he placed his once. brought hand on a hot- water can, but quickly drew it back.
The next day he put his hand towards the can with a peculiar movement and sound, but without trying to touch it. These are signs of memory and to some
extent of reasoning.
in
may
also few, b, d,
m,
(boo at nine
soon dropped
"
it). yet there are only which seem to express a definite idea.
As
Feeling of Self.
This
is
difficult,
He
examines his
wonder,
hold out a
and
offer it to his
two years
"
old described
Sense.
Moral
Preyer
first
by Preyer.
says
nothing of
age of
this,
but
sign at the
Moral sense.
thirteen
Doddy won't give poor papa a kiss naughty Doddy,' made the child feel slightly uncomfortable. Our nurse thought once that she saw a guilty look in the baby's face when he had done something wrong, but we can
hardly say that the moral sense shows itself yet. He seems to be only amused when told not to do anything,
ISA
and
once do
it
disobedience, but as a
new kind
of
game."
With one
or
may
close this
new-born child has not character, but disposition. is the result of innumerable unconscious mental impulses, the result of, mainly, unconscious
Character
education
its
;
possession "
,
.
from heredity.
life
Later on in
Mmd in
early child-
come
to the front.
hood.
nation and can distinguish characters at this age quick to obey one, slow to obey another.
They behave
father."
2
differently
"Imagination
children.
of a part
The
and the
new
situation.
It
is
"At
this
age, too,
we
sense of the ludicrous, all coming into consciousness. to three years the child possesses generally receptual intelligence only, not yet having the power of
From two
forming concepts. At the average age of three years individual self-consciousness begins." 4
!" Memoirs
2 Prof.
3
of a Child," Parents' Renew, vol. ii., p. 535, etc. Baldwin, Mental Development of Childhood, p. 125.
J. Bully, Studies of Childhood, p. 38. 4 Sir D. ft. N. Buckle, President, Sect. Psychol., Brit. British Medical Journal, 11th September, 1897.
in
IN
THE CHILD
185
when
its
closely observed,
powers of imaginabe derived from seen to clearly happiness psychical sources in the unconscious mind, rather than
tion, its
is
and especially
in connection
with
But above
child,
all
else,
two
faculties
*
with
Love and
sense of
justice.
seem
subsequent
All
They
"love";
all
are
love
and sense
of
justice.
children
and deepest
of all
emotions;
right
sense of justice and the source of both very deep down in the uncon-
scious mind.
And
ment
here
we may
moment
in
amaze-
"Wordsworth's
oft-quoted lines on the Divine origin of children, like so many of his utterances, are not mere poetry but
God is Love and its source; contain profound truth. God is Light and the source of all righteousness and And the little child reproduces in its unconjustice.
scious infant
mind
which
After
all
good
comes the
these
two great
principles
from
fulfilling of the
whole law.
all, when Professor Sully traces the source of our " unconscious mind to some One," he has, at any rate
as regards these
qualities
that
make
found truth.
When
it
to his statement,
scious
186
We
scious
mind
clear
he has
whose education we have to speak) mind the child has and that mental qualities from birth if not before,
(of
:
all
unconsciously exercised at
first, is
The
conscious
after
consciousness
has
dawned) are
redity, that
.
Next memory, the elements of will, certain emotions, notably love and happiness certain
sition, individuality.
;
such as love
of justice. With the dawnings of consciousness we get the moral sense, the formation of speech, and the first exercises of all the special senses and habits. These,
essentials of life
and character, are the contents of the unconscious mind at this period, and most of them are susceptible of
development and modified by education.
CHAPTER
In
IX.
with us
may have
felt
at
various
stages
rather uncertain of the ground beneath their feet, owing to the little known nature of the district
travelled
;
educatlon
but here
we reach
and yet one that is as full of undiscovered gold as the north-west of America appears now (1898) to be.
Without
necessarily
committing
themselves
to
the
most advanced
educationalists,
amongst
whom we
in-
P. Eichter, Preyer, C. Mason, and many others, clearly recognise that the best and most efficacious form of
child training
is
that which
is
addressed to unconscious;
all admit, though most probably some would shrink from the words, that there are unconscious psychic powers and that these can be educated and not only so, but that it is on their proper education, rather than
;
on that addressed to consciousness, that the most important part of the character of the individual depends. Dr. Carpenter, for example, says (187)
:
188
"There are two sorts of influence that which is active and voluntary and which we exert purposively and that which is unconscious and flows from us
unaware
to
ourselves.
The
influence
we
exert un-
Of course education in the ordinary sense knows " For a long time the error nothing of this.
Ordinary
prevailed that for the child's first learning there was absolute necessity of a teacher, as if only complete thought could be impressed on the child's brain, and that only by this means the mind would
conscious
finally
Herein
lies
gross fallacy."
The
is
fallacy
is,
in
fact,
conscious
mind
susceptible of education.
generally understood by early education and child training, is the guidance of the child consciously,
is
What
by rules and commands and precepts (a fresh one may be each day) enforced by smacks and slaps and other penal measures many times a day, coupled with direct
instruction in A, B, C,
of intellectual culture.
1, 2, 3,
prevailing
ignorance and what ordinarily passes as parental edu" While it is seen that to gain a livelihood an cation.
elaborate preparation is needed, it appears to be thought that for the bringing up of children no preparation
whatever
i 2
is
needed.
Not an hour
is
spent by either a
W.
B. Carpenter, Mental Physiology, 4th edition, p. 542. Preyer, Mental Development of Childhood, p. 66.
189
all
responrational
sibilitiesthe
management
of a family.
No
plea can be put forward for leaving the act of education out of the curriculum. The subject which, involves all
other subjects, and that in which education should culminate, is the theory and practice of education. The management of children is lamentably bad. In most
cases the treatment adopted on every occasion is that which the impulse of the moment prompts, and varies
from hour
"
rela-
If the secret
actions of a large class of ordinary fathers were brought to light, they would run somewhat after this fashion.
In the
child
;
first
in the second,
may Do
'
be applied to one's own advantage; in the ninth, ' in the tenth, A boy not make a noise, dear child
;
'
must not
sit
so quiet
'.
in the twelfth,
'
You must
edu-
So by hourly changes the father concate yourself 2 ceals the untenableness of his principles." Conscious education has been varied in every conceivable way. Therehavebeenreading with tears and reading without tears nursery rule, drawing-room rule, schoolroom rule, but every fad and every variety has followed
;
namely, all education, must address itself to name, training worthy the child's consciousness, i.e., the conscious mind. And this is the tap-root error of every such system.
principle,
all
of the
95, 96.
Ibid.
190
Here the
Unconscious C n goe S on
naturally.
man
"
we g e
j.
as
jj. g
men
and good
women
minds?"
sight this question seems conclusive in favour of the value and sufficiency for all practical purposes of
At
first
conscious education.
But the
it
or not,
whether the parent likes whether the parent knows it or not, whether
true answer
is
that,
the parent helps it, hinders it, or ignores it, the education of the unconscious is ever going on aye, and going on faster far than that of the conscious, and whatever the
;
child subsequently turns out to be will be far rather due to this than to all the direct efforts made by the parent.
All around the child lie countless forces, unnoticed and unknown by the parent, while within the child lies a vast receptive capacity, unknown to the parent, and
still
largely ignored
be his teachers
upon the ignored mind that the child's real early education and character are
action of these unnoticed forces
mainly due.
is
through life, and, indeed, later sooner or by parents. Take, for dimly perceived Does instance, the value of a public school education.
not every parent who has a son at Eton or Harrow well know that the greatest value to the boy is the
And
mind?
191
why an
untrained child,
,
neglected, grows
one whose conscious training has been up often so well. This has
Reason why
untrained children often turn
One parent
the other lets the child run absolutely wild, and the result is often to make the former doubt the wisdom
of
her methods.
through good luck it may be rather than good care, the "wild" child has been cast amongst unnoticed forces, beneficial to its character,
the secret
is
Now
that,
And
of
natures
education
artificial
and
and
thus human.
All that is
its
This education
is
is
no invention
of ours.
done here
importance, and indicate the methods by which the education may be guided into good and wise channels,
remembering
that, for
good or
our
lives,
though and
pre-eminently in childhood.
"
The
and
reflects
assimilates the
impressed.
The
*
influences
man what
he
is."
192
"We are momentarily under the influence of outward events, which are registered within, and become,
were, part of ourselves being, indeed, factors in most of our feelings and motives." 1
as
it
;
"
"
of education is that
which
(conscious), the most precious lessons are those which we learn out of school
however, think from this that direct teaching, instruction and precept, too, have not their right and proper place, but it is indeed a far lower and
not,
Let us
humbler one than that generally imagined and far indeed from occupying the exclusive place it has been
given.
Here we must turn aside for a moment to explain what must already be felt to be a difficulty, Unconscious ^ n t indeed a fallacy, that vitiates the whole andeducaunconsdous, the same.
argument
of these pages,
is
Th.e difficulty
that
we
ently,
of the
conscious education of
;
of the unconscious
mind
and
and of
uncon-
conscious education
scious,
of
unconscious education.
essentially different thoughts ?
Nay, more
i
is
And, if and subjects extremely connot most of the evidence probBook of Health,
p. 524.
Dr. J. Pollock,
8 Sir J. C.
p. 345.
193
ably in favour of the unconscious education of mind, rather than in favour of the education of the unconsci-
ous mind
the chapter
when
But they are in essence the same. The unconscious education of the mind does not
mean
that education
itself is
;
conscious or unconscious
to the
conveyed mind, therefore, with reference to the education imin fact, with parted, is in a state of unconsciousness
;
mind consciously
The
it
is
unconscious
mind
mind
means, mind.
But
to consciousness, as
rise
subsequently
Three varieties
to consciousness
with regard
Three
varieties of
First,
there
the ordinary education; the conscious instruction of the conscious as, for
is
;
example, in being taught the French language by a master and books. Secondly, there is the unconscious education of the conscious or, in other words, the
;
education of the conscious through the unconscious. In this it is the unconscious mind that is primarily reached, but the education does not stop there, but is
as, passed on by the unconscious into consciousness for example, when French is imbibed from residence in
;
learnt by
French
children.
13
194
can speak French, only the process of education has been addressed in this case to the unconscious mind. Then, lastly, there is the education of the unconscious mind that does not pass
on or
Under
character, conscience, principles, inhave their home in unconsciousness. all of which tuitions,
come motives,
On some
of these
we
in the unconscious,
eye of consciousness with an effort, but their sphere is and the bringing up of them fre-
quently into consciousness by careful introspection, often leads to mental hypochondriasis just as bringing the* unconscious organic functions and actions into
;
notice leads to physical hypochondriasis and hysteria. It is well to recognise there are two spheres or divisions
mind, which to a certain extent can be made to overhave their distinctive prolap, but which nevertheless
of
perties
and value
of
and principles
scious
;
the springs, the foundations, roots life, which lie rather in the Unconlie
in
the Conscious.
Now in
first
thus writing on education, we must therefore distinguish broadly between conscious and uncon-
scious education
latter
unconscious
its
195
though not in the process, and that where both and process are sub-conscious. We fully justify, " education of the however, the right to apply the term
results
unconscious mind
"
whatever
its
ultimate fruits
may
all
be,
and with
references and quotations referring " education of the to such training, as examples of the
continue to use
unconscious mind"; specially emphasising, however, those particular processes which do not go further, but
expend their whole force on developing tant part of our mental life.
this all-impor-
The net
stated
result, therefore, of
is this.
ing by which the greatest store is generally set, is not after all the training that is most determining the
child's
future; this
is
and educating
or evil that
is
of the child's
going on
that
unconscious mind for good same time entirely outto direct the especial
Now
it
is to this
we wish
attention of our readers, in order that they may under" stand what we mean by the phrase the education of
the unconscious
It is
mind ".
surely all-important, if our children are surrounded with these unnoticed powers, that object of the
we
should
know something
act,
of them,
of the
and
of
tl0n
*? the
and
power
unc nscious.
we may
in their
for good,
and not
for evil,
child's nature.
196
The
Direct instruction, or book learning as it is learning. character called, must be addressed to consciousness
;
through the
unconscious.
"
says,
Children are wanting in that which, ing character. above all, goes to make up character that is, will.
individuality,
place in
is
consciousness;
*
unconscious."
those early impressions, of which no one seems to be conscious, least of all the child, and which gather up power as the rolling avalanche, the elements are
collected for future emotions,
"In
moods,
etc.,
that
make up
2 a greater part of the history of the individual." " The strong individual struggles out of individuality into character, the weak lets himself slide out of the
domain
unconscious."
The
scious in us
sciousness.
that
it
happiness
this is
of child-life,
....
but increases
and
no small matter.
house without
home
of Education, 2nd edition, pp. 116, 117. Sub-conscious Self, p. 47. J. F. Herbart, Science of Education, 2nd edition, pp. 116, 117.
1.0?
The awful
without happiness lowers the whole psychical health. effects of a miserable infancy and unhappy
who
is
like
a plant which has been reared without sunshine. Happiness in the family is a sine quel non for a menhealthy child. do not require to create happiness in children, but only to see that we do not destroy it. The happitally
We
first
instance,
(its
is
spontaneous, and
imagination),
drawn
largely
from within
own
In childhood, the pains it suffers are mainly physical, few mental, while its pleasures are both physical and largely psychical;
afterwards from without.
therefore, there
than
pain in
a far greater proportion of pleasure young as compared with adult life, where
is
psychic pain forms the greater ptirt. The balance of increasing pain seems to turn after puberty, when the
child gets sadder
and more thoughtful. care being taken to elicit the benevolent sensibilities, it is the happiest children who will be the
"Due
unselfish."
is
How common
it
to
meet with
irritable
minds
that spring up in opposition to any calm statement of Such a facts, with a sort of instinctive resentment.
state of
mind may
that called forth the principle of self-defence, early 2 (In short, an long before reason had been developed."
life
unhappy
1
childhood.)
Home
Education,
p. 39.
Ibid., p. 42.
198
great points in
Herbert
unconscious
education.
is
the foundation
in
f character,
no
is
wa y
^g mora
which
let
us see what
general principle of unconscious mind education grasp from the teaching of Herbert Spencer.
we can
Speaking of the value of unconscious education from surroundings, as compared with book instruction, he
says
:
" Not perceiving the enormous value of that spontaneous education which goes on in early years, but perceiving that a child's restless observation, instead of being ignored or checked, should be diligently ministered
and made as accurate and complete as possible, parents insist on occupying its eyes and thoughts with
to,
things that are for the time being incomprehensible and repugnant. They do not see that only when his
acquaintance with the objects and processes of the household, the streets and the fields is becoming totally exhausted, only then shall a child be introduced to new
sources of information which books supply." 1 " In education the process of self-development should
Process of
cat/on^o^the
unconscious.
De encouraged to the uttermost. Children sn011 De led to make their own investiga-
tions
and
to
draw
little
their
own
inferences.
as possible,
and induced
all-important
in
much
as possible.
The
knowledge
its
of
the child
is self-
p. 26.
199
Watch taught in the use of its mother tongue. and and inference the ceaseless observation inquiring
may safely follow going on in the child's mind. the discipline of nature throughout may, by a skilful ministration, make the mind as self-developing in its
We
doing
this
1
can
we produce
activity."
Any one
mends
"
is
reading the above condensed passage will which H. Spencer here com-
and in
its
earlier
stages, acquired
wholly unconsciously.
of education
which goes to
own
secure direct self-preservation, Nature takes into her hands. While yet in its nurse's arms, the infant,
by hiding its face at the sight of a stranger, shows the dawning instinct to attain safety, which later on is
to balance its body, how to further developed. control its movements so as to avoid collisions, what
How
and
will hurt
if
if
struck,
what
objects
things will these and various other pieces of information needful for the avoidance of death or accident, it is ever learn;
on the limbs, which they bear the weight of the body and which not
fall
ing (and
for
we may add
upon
chiefly called
gaining this experience and receiving this that there shall be no thwarting of discipline, 2 nature."
scope
1
69, 70.
Ibid., p. 12.
200
"It was the opinion of Pestalozzi, and one which ever since his day gaining ground, J has been b Must
'
begin
from the
cradle.
that education of
from the
cradle.
any discernment the wide-eyed gaze df the infant at surrounding objects, knows very well that education
does begin thus early,
whether we intend
it
or not.
This activity of the faculties from the very first, being spontaneous and inevitable, the question is whether we
shall supply in
may
exercise themselves.
The
earliest impressions
sensations
produced
by resistance,
Following, therefore, the necessary law of progression from the simple to the complex, we should provide for the infant a sufficiency of objects, presenting different kinds of resistance, of objects resound,
etc.
and of sounds, conloudness and pitch. Every faculty during that spontaneous activity that accompanies its evolution is capable of receiving more vivid impressions
flecting different qualities of light
trasted in
their
than at any other period. Both the temper and health will be improved by the continual gratification resulting from a due supply of these impressions which every
: Here is an admirable child so greedily assimilates." of of a unconscious education but description phase
little
known.
Herbert Spencer, Education, pp. 72, 73. And yet an intelligent modern writer (Mrs. Earle, in Pot-lJ oufri from a Sussex Garden) considers it matters little what a child's education or surroundings are before twelve or fourteen, as
1
its
after
life.
201
Now
cation
let
of
us see the results of a perverted or bad eduthe unconscious, from the same
Bad uncon,
author.
"
What
is
to
infant
be expected from a mother who shakes her because it will not suck ? How much sense
is
scious education.
of justice
likely
to be instilled
by a father who,
hearing his child scream because its ringer is jammed between the window sash and the sill, begins to beat it?"
Who has not seen a child repeatedly slapped by nurse or parent for a fretfulness arising from bodily derangement ? Are not the constant and often quite
needless thwartings that the young experience, the injunction to sit still, w hich an active child cannot
y
"
irritation,
the
command
ling, etc.,
window when
sympathy
?
travelx
"
extend these
enough have been meant by the bad education of the unconscious mind. Here the education is given to the child probably unconsciously by the parent, and
instances almost indefinitely, but
show what
is
certainly the
child
;
evil is absorbed unconsciously by the and when, in later years, it turns out a tyrant or a bully, there are few who will see that the source of
And
yet so
it is.
no
discipline in education ?
Cer-
tainly there is; but not where not needed, and not
1
p. 98.
202
capricious
character.
What
it
should be
we
will
Having thus surveyed the ground generally, let us consider what are the true methods of unconThreefold sc i us education. Matthew Arnold himself uncrasdous
perhaps hardly knew when he framed the sentence, Education is an atmosphere, a discipline, a To us its essential value life," how much it contained.
"
is
education.
points out the true methods and principles of the education of the unconscious mind. An " atmo" " " life are, at any rate, forces that act sphere and a
that
it
unconsciously,
line
and, as
;
we
shall
it
"
point out,
is
discipits
"
indeed
automatic in
action.
We have,
form
its its
as
we have
mould its disposition, to develop and instruct its senses, until the results brain, emerge into full consciousness the infant's mind and
character, to
;
filled
pre-conscious activity through the physical nature, may be admitted and systematically acted on especially in
;
that very earliest stage of infant education, which lays the foundation and moral habits of conscious life." x
"Darwin
Heredity and
its forces.
ma l.
1
W. B. Carpenter, Mental Physiology, 4th edition, p. W. Preyer, Mental Education qf Childhood, p. 164.
353.
203
[But we must remember a great deal passes as heredity which is derived rather from the company of the
parents in early them.
"
life,
of a sub-conscious self,
traced
early childhood,
when
parents and their example are sub-consciously perceived, and, by their constant repetition, form fundamental im1
pressions."
For instance, " A young boy had an invincible dislike to music (naturally put down to heredity), and couldn't
be prevailed upon to continue his piano lessons. I was impressed by the violence of his aversion, and, upon
inquiry,
was
'
told he
next to a
conservatoire
of music.
No
far
more
Herbert Spencer on
resembles far more the company he keeps than that from which he descended," he was bringing in the forces of unconscious education, whereas Dar-
of conscious education.
When
uncon-
we
1
home
in the
scious mind,
Ibid., p. 64.
204
drive
must be addressed
to
unconsciousness.
Even when we
of the brain is laid
cies,
we
know
cate
for we well say education is stronger the education of the unconscious mind we advostill
is all-powerful to change and modify this very structure in the direction wished for.
Curiously enough, Sir Michael Foster, with a poesy Power of the ^ na ^ i s somewhat out of place in dealing with
StorS
the body.
18
Physiology, in
his
address to the
attributes
all
British
Medical
Association,
these
mental powers to physiology herself, that here obviously stands for "the unconscious mind ". "When physiology
is
dealing with those parts of the body which we call glandular tissues, and the like,
[sic]
mend that which is bad usage and disease, but so to train the growing tissues and to guide the grown ones as that the best
use
points out the way, not only hurt, to repair the damages of
of them for the purposes of life. She she governs and educates." x Surely the poetic spirit could not idealise a science further with the effect, however, for those who do not turn it into
may
be
made
;
n'ot
only heals
mind,
is
unrecognised.
" " does she do otherwise Nor," he continues,
when
it is
Nay,
205
life is, above that of all the other tissues, contingent on the environment and susceptibility of education." To return to Arnold. "Education is an atmosphere"
breathes.
The
;
air that
we
breathe
is
medium
it
that surrounds us
is
spirits
breathe
is
the
medium
of a
that surrounds
them
in
short,
"
our environment.
The surroundings
lives,
man
ma-
terial or
he
immaterial, which form the atmosphere in which which give colour to his daily life, and, often
themselves unseen, are present with him for good or evil throughout the whole term of his existence. They
affect
and
little
child
of
is
fluid,
imprinting upon him the shape Education by and outlines you desire as the result of your atmos P here education the one a conscious and perceptual, the
two ways
If I wish to cast other unconscious and atmospheric. a bronze statue, I do not trouble about the bronze all
;
my
care
is
Every
line,
every curve I
there,
and
it is
on the perfection
statue depends.
of the
of the
mould
fills
is its
I pour in ihe liquid bronze. The environment. Left in there long enough it
every curve, every line, and reproduces all its feaI break the mould and there is the statue, the tures.
outcome
of its surroundings.
that
the child.
is,
Again, I wish to mould an atmosphere, an environment an education of the unconscious mind. This
Education
is
Dr. J
Pollock,
519, 5:0t
206
then
great educational force, and this shall overcome the lines of hereditary evil or defect. I spend
my
first
time in perfecting my mould in other words, in seeing that the child's surroundings are exactly what I wish the child to become. Then I pour the child in
all
my
The
child
process.
increases
and, best of
all,
the result
of the
sure.
stamp
first
of its
and
it is
this
and nothing
foundation of
its
character.
What
a power,
what an
unknown
force is here.
" Life and health are largely acted on (unconsciously) by agents immaterial or psychical. The lives and well-
They belong
to
of civilisation.
They
"
The schoolmaster,
at the
of
it
justice be
menced
moment
of birth,
Vast stores
mount importance
up spontaneously (uncon-
sciously) in babyhood."
Dr. J. Pollock,
Book of Health,
p. 520.
2 Sir J. C.
p. 345,
207
an influence on the psychical organism as the moral atmosphere which is breathed by it. The composition of that atmosphere is of fundamental importance."
a
But observe, if we had only conscious minds, this would be useless there would be nothing to act on in us, for it can only work on unconscious material.
force
;
thought, the emotions, and the will are all formed largely thus, for the will itself can be unconscious as
The
well as conscious.
instructive,
We
" Again, education is a discipline ". An engine differs from a horse in that it is subject to discipline. Education b y dlscl Pline It can only run on its rails, it cannot wander
-
The
laying
down
of the railroad
the discipline which determines the path the engine must travel. Habit is the railroad of character. " Habit is as strong as ten natures,' and nature means
heredity.
Here
the
again, therefore,
in education to
overcome inherited
in
If environcast,
ment
habit
is
mould
the track along which it has to travel. sow a habit, reap a character act, reap a habit
is
;
Sow an
;
sow a
character, reap a destiny. Observe again, habit is unconscious education. You " Do this or that," and you address consciousness ; say
that,
is
turned,
W.
B. Carpenter,
Prof.
edition, p. 353.
208
the thing
scious
is
continual friction
and punishment.
You form
mind of doing this or that, and lo and behold, laid down a track along which the mind finds have you smoother to move than in any other direcand it easier
tion
;
for the
psychic action
henceforth
is
all is
easy.
Habit, therefore,
The
third
and
last is
"education
is
a life".
We
do
Education by example.
not
know
exactly
originally
meant
by
take it education was a vital force. " " as the Just atmosphere is the environment or way.
" " mould, as discipline
is
We
"
"
life is
and the
life
and
ideal.
By
the
not the
child's.
It is
its goal the parent's life, the parent that is the child's
it
life
before
we mean
unconscious
inspirer
and
(sometimes conscious) ideal, the child's " The unconscious action of model.
feelings
We
mind
forming
1
mind
as disciplined
by habit, and,
lastly,
looking on the
W.
B. Carpenter,
edition, p. 353.
209
it
rather
than around
towards which
it
ever strives.
The
tion, as given
following are by C.
among Mason
upon particular subjects, as, for exthe child's relations with other people. Habits ample,
of neatness, of disorder, of punctuality, of
Definite ideas
moderation
general modes
of thought, as affected
by altruism or
egoism.
Modes
of feeling
and
action.
aftairs of daily life,
Objects of thought
the small
the
human mind.
Distinguishing talent music, eloquence, invention. Disposition or tone of character, as it shows itself in
and
affects his
life
or
reserved
or frank, morose
or genial, melancholy
We
will
now
chapter.
1
C. Mason, Parents
and
Children, p. 28.
14
CHAPTEK
X.
ITS
DETAILED
Plato
The impressions which man receives in says childhood are the most important, as they are more What is practised easily impressed and retained best.
:
"
from youth up gradually forms part of the character." " It is wonderful how powerfully what may be called
the current of daily life carries along with it, without any consciousness of its influence, those who are subject to it."
"
1
regard every activity in the universe as 2 exercising a sub-conscious influence upon us." will proceed to consider those activities that im-
We
may
We
mediately surround and influence the child. Before birth the child is largely influenced by the
Ante-natal
influences.
The
characters
^e
mother and
somehow
have power to impress the embryonic brain. A child of a drunken father has certain special mental characand of course, beside and beyond these, there teristics
;
are
all
W.
Prof.
Holman, Education,
p. 71.
(210)
ITS
EDUCATION
211
the father and the mother themselves are the expresThe physical health and strength of the mother sion.
has much to say to the child at this time. Nay more, readers of C. Kingsley's Life will well remember, as we quote in a subsequent chapter, how his mother, before
his birth, travelled in Devonshire, in the
ternal impressions
might
favourably act
effect.
more
or less nebulous,
however
true.
We
-
will therefore
i n fl uenC e of
and childhood, proceeding environment from the outermost layers of the atmosphere to the
ment
in infancy
innermost.
First then as regards country.
Its nationality affects
character
and
not
environment as distinguished from the or English, again the English as distinguished even from the Scotch, are all special educators of the unconscious mind.
the French
" The forms of government, their freedom or their liberal institutions or misrule, influence the tyranny,
intellect "
and
as
spirit of
the people."
The
fail to
be ob-
served
character and temperament (these are unconscious mental qualities) of the race.
shaping the
'
is
a proverbial expression,
and
all
in
inhabit
temperate
clinies.
The
2\2
northern parts of France and Italy are inhabited by people of superior energy to those of the south." 1
Then
country. "
Many other agents are formative of character, such as mountains, rivers, lakes, plains and the ocean. The dwellers among mountains are very subject to home
sickness or nostalgia they are essentially patriotic ; the inhabitants of plains are less so ; while the dweller
;
by the ocean
is
essentially a wanderer."
may be added that mountains produce unconhardihood and bravery; extensive plains, dulness sciously and slowness of temperament woods and forests, craft
this
;
To
and superstition the shore, frankness and restlessness. There can be no doubt of the force of the local climatic, political, and national qualities of country, as
;
Take the
Townand
y.
country
now
as
an educator
of the
uncon-
scious, as contrasted
in its value
with the
"
:
town,
It
dark dwelling in the turmoil of the metropolis. ent in many respects are the thoughts and
village "
feelings of
the child from the metropolis and the child from the
best school," says Sir J. C. Browne, "for sense education is the home and the country."
1
The
2 Dr. J. Pollock, Book of Health, p. 521. Ibid. See Prof. Holman, Introduction to Education, p. 455.
ITS
EDUCATION
213
country, above
if
all,
at
all,
in the
words
Isaac Taylor,
"The
in
and fruitfulness
of the
bud
summer-time
is
comes
".
Eng-
increasing
way
of toys,
sights,
In the country nothing of the sort is needed, and yet the mind, that has had its eyes opened, is never
dull.
The education received by the unconscious mind from a constant contemplation of bricks and mortar, lines of houses and streets and all the other monotonous and ugly works of man, and that received from
a survey of nature in
living
all
and ever-changing
all
make
and country, have their part in the forming and fashioning of the unconscious mind.
The
that
it
first
should be country and not town. A whole chapter might profitably be devoted to this one subject, but space forbids more than the briefest reference to
the various environments.
The next
is
consciously J received in
_
tt
Home aud
institutions,
ctC.
214
"The
home
in
which the
man
spends his
infancy The son of a professor receives manifold imperceptible impressions in childhood which hasten his intellectual
development. The child of parents of high social position soon acquires the assurance and firmness of
But this is rather a special view. " Speaking generally, At home," as Isaac Taylor points " that atmosphere is most readily obtained which out,
good manners."
1
will
mind
promote the growth of the various faculties of the in nature's order and at nature's rate ".
life
In early
all its
fit
characteristics
and
qualities
is
impressed upon
its
unconscious mind.
literally the has to be so modelled this is the world that carefully atmosphere that has to be so pure and healthy ; this is
;
This then
truly and
But
other
in later
life,
it is
the
way about
in great
measure
and
it is
no small
mind
to
suit
it,
instead of the
It is
mind having
bedroom
to
have a marked
individuality of its own, according to their different natures so that it is as important to have a well-fitting
;
environment as to have a
know a remarkable case of a very nervous lady always frets and chafes in ordinary houses, but
has built herself a house
1
who who
full of
ITS
EDUCATION
215
shell,
of subtle irritation.
fit
In a way, our environments are always educating us> but only in childhood and infant life have we to adapt
ourselves entirely to
this point
them whether bad or good; and on which we are now insisting gives the
greatest proof of the all-importance of the character of the home in the first few years of life.
Health
is
light, air,
and
good
food.
With them, it
is
is
surprising
how
If,
a child can
bad surroundings.
on the other
hand, a child
he becomes
physically,
How
and must be carefully guarded at all points. then can the house educate the child? Well,
in its garden
stables
by the
Environment ofthehouse
-
these
will
The house
ments,
itself,
and sunny
cheerfulness.
The
nurse.
aspect bright
If the
Then
as to the nursery
and the
former
is clean, tidy,
with bright wall-paper, simple toys that can be built up, pulled to pieces and afford real employto the child,
ment
good plain furniture, a good clock always going, well-served meals, it will stimulate un-
21(5
consciously in the child cleanliness, tidiness, order, constructive ability, ingenuity, perseverance, method,
skill, self-respect,
well-informed, truly Christian and speak good English, we shall foster in the child truth, order,
ful,
exactitude, propriety, love, gentleness, intelligence, reverence, and faith, and speech pleasant in tone and
accent.
Thus can the unconscious mind be educated without a word being addressed to consciousness in early life.
We would
to
means
let
the
good which these surroundings do be increased and strengthened by wise words addressed to consciousness.
Only
value
this is not
it.
we
As
to clothes, let
them be
to the
carefully preserved.
The
The food should be very plain, well cooked, and served to the minute, abundant in quantity, with plenty
of variety.
One
hint more.
"
and a
mountain district produce a better man than a southern clime and a plain, on account of the greater difficulties to be overcome so do a plain home, a simple nursery, plain strong toys that afford scope for construction and
;
ITS
EDUCATION
21 7
produce a better character than great luxury and ornament and expensive toys, where everything is done for the child and nothing left for him to do. The hardships in childhood should never go the
length of interfering in the least with the child's natural but should be cheerfulness, still less with his health
;
It will
this environ-
First of all, generally through the senses, " education of the senses will not be
environment cd u elites
The
neglected
which
children are only placed in positions in abundant and varied sense impressions are
if
accessible.
Vivid and
essential to subsequent
all
should therefore be agreeable, cheerful, bright, varied, harmonious, the faces loving and smilsights
The
ing.
The
shrill),
harmonious, cheery,
not top sudden, varied. The scents should be pleasing and varied.
The The
tastes
and
variety,
and encouraged
in every
way.
The special means by which surroundings educate the mind are by unconscious suggestion and the great
;
result that is
What
is
is
Sir J. C.
p. 346.
218
of unconscious ideas.
an unconscious idea?
living mental seed that, planted in the unconscious mind, It fires the mind, it sets in flowers in consciousness.
Let us
"
see
do with ideas.
An
idea
influence of
ldeas.
'
may invest as an atmosphere, rather than strike as a weapon ; it may be a vague appe'
tency towards something. To excite this appetency towards something towards things lovely,
honest, and of good report, is the earliest and most important ministry of the educator. These indefinite ideas are held in that thought which surrounds the child as an atmosphere, which he breathes as his breath of life
;
which the child inspires his atmosphere unconscious ideas of right living emanates from his That he should take direction and inspiration parents. from all the casual life about him is a thought which
and
this
in
makes the most of us hold our breath." " The duty of parents is to sustain a child's inner
life
with ideas as they sustain his body with food. The child has affinities with evil as well as with good therefore, hedge him about from any chance lodgment
;
of evil suggestion.
ideas
The initial idea begets subsequent take care that children get right therefore, primary ideas on the great relations and duties of life.
;
how the destiny of a life is shaped in the the reverent naming of the Divine name, nursery, by
Thus we
see
1
Prof. Baldwin,
p. 5.
ITS
EDUCATION
219
by the thought
of heart that
of duty
little
child gets,
who
is
made
consciously to finish
by the hardness
1
comes
to
the child
who
spoken of lightly." " It would be possible through suggestions, without words, to prepare even from the third to the tenth
month for the subsequent education through words. To do this we must carefully repeat those suggestions
2 that are helpful towards harmonious development." The influence of play and playthings is great in set-
ting the child to find out, search, pull and pick, build up and throw down, thus continually exciting fresh ideas.
It is initial ideas that fire the train of thought,
and
con-
that
is
why
"Enter not
into temptation
sider
it
when we
and gestures is are enafterwards our that ever perceptions AppercepThis is called tbnsin riched with these stores.
The
childhood.
is
the power of thus storing mind with ideas that largely dis"
A dog cannot tinguishes the child from the animal. will bark at the outline of a but dog, drawing recognise
a picture of one.
child
immediately, by apperception from stores of ideas, in all the rest and recognises it is a dog." 8
1 C. Mason, Parents and Children, pp. 36-38. W. Preyer, Mental Development of Childhood, p. 41* See Isaac Taylor, Some Education, p. 122.
220
The whole process is unconscious, but affects the life. The words home, mother, nursery, childmean in after life pretty much what was hood, God,
entire
wrapped round it thus becomes a most cherished and lovely doll. The simpler and commoner the object the more is the child stimulated to clothe it with ideas. So that the toys should largely consist of bits of wood
old rag
of various
etc.;
and these
shapes and sizes, small bricks and stones, will be transformed into houses and
and
The importance
of
m The romance
of childhood.
child's life is
of.
little
thought "
To
.
the child
it is
.
happiness. Every plaything, every room, all the scenes of its childhood are thus invested with a
ideal. The parent who wisely understands this will use romance and parable largely in indirect training, and thus not only sow ideas, but
glamour wholly
mould the
A large
doll's
mind
training.
The rooms
can be peopled with heroic, noble-minded, and unselfish dolls, where courage, foresight, justice and love can
be continually and conspicuously displayed.
And
thus
ITS
EDUCATION
221
the vivid imagination of childhood can be used to imprint indelibly on the brain the highest principles. The
is
to check or ridicule
all
is
viewed in
after life
largely in infancy
and childhood.
Some who
this
evil
have been wholly neglected or viciously trained at period owe the whole of their subsequent career of
things afterwards
whereas, on the other hand, a wise can overcome the most vicious hereditary
;
bear witness to
generations of hereditary crime, and, by fashioning their apperception unconsciously on the Divine injunction that
such a mine of educational wisdom in " Whatsoever training the unconscious things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things
is
are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report, . think on these things," 1 by their surroundings physical
. .
and psychical, she has overcome the inherited vice of their natures, and reared girls who have pursued steady,
useful
and virtuous
do not think
lives.
it
We
conscious
for the
mind
to form a
more
young
able verse
we have
1
quoted.
St. Paul,
Philippians,
iv. 3.
222
We now
railroad of habit.
The
the
discipline, or railroad
Locke says " We must expect nothing from precautionary maxims and good precepts, though they be deeply impressed on the (conscious) mind beyond the point at which practice has changed them (unconsciously) to
form habits". 1
:
Niemeyer says
with habits
of order, cleanliness,
" Habit goes further than precept, and the teacher must ascribe most of his successes to the formation of
to say,
unconscious education
is
lasting than conscious. " Kousseau says Education is certainly nothing but a formation of habits ". Character is undoubtedly the
sum
of a person's habits.
and spoken too there at length of their general value, so that this need not be enlarged upon again here.
The impalpable thoughts that we think, leave their mark upon the brain, and set up connections between
the nerve cells
earliest
"
and the cerebrum grows to the uses it is and most constantly put to. A great function of
;
the educator
is
purposefully and methodically sown, that the child shall reap the habits of the good life in thinking and doing,
1
Paul Radestock, Habit in Education, p. 4. J. G. Curtman, quoted by Paul Radestock, Habit in Education,
p. 6.
ITS
EDUCATION
223
Educate the will run in tear of the moral them, without the constant wear and All the minor moralities of life mayeffort of decision. be made habitual to the child. He has been brought
of conscious effort.
minimum
life
up to be courteous, prompt, punctual, neat, considerate; and he practises these virtues without conscious effort. It is much easier to behave in the way he is used to
than to originate a
new
line of conduct.
original
is checked, not so easily by precept as a good one to overcome it. Thus the unby forming conscious cerebration of a greedy child runs on selfish
bad habit
lines of cakes
and sweets. This is corrected by introducing a new idea and a new habit, that of the delight and of giving pleasure to others with these good things
;
month
new tendency
"
old.
be over-estimated."
We will turn
now
to
some
to
special habits.
fix
One
of the
habits
faculty
C. Mason, Parents and Children, pp. 117, 118. Dr. Gerard Smith, Habit in Man, p. 25. Victoria Institute.
224
distances,
scribing
fect.
them That is
is
Form a habit
accurately.
Here
in
the thing
done.
m&
fore
form habits.
structure in early childhood, notably beThe earlier the f age. fift een y ears
period that habits are formed the more lasting are they, and reappear at a late period of life, when other habits acquired since have passed away. Plasticity of brain is
essential, that
is,
tissues
weak enough
to yield to in-
fluences,
to retain
them.
After
developed, that is, after thirty, or perhaps later, to acquire new habits and to give up old become alike more difficult. In old age we find, as
the brain
we have
are lost
a rule, personal habits are acquired before twenty, professional habits between twenty and
thirty.
As
changed for a day. If it be the learning of some steps in dancing they should never be changed till fixed in the brain. Again, it is of great importance and this has a very wide application to the training of children that the habit be taught and executed accurately. If
the steps be taught in a slovenly way they will always be executed in a slovenly manner. If a child learn some-
make
five,
and
at other times
make
always be confusion in
the
mind
or brain paths.
ITS
EDUCATION
225
Habits of tLo,, g ht
-
as
in
writing, as well as in the lines that habit has traced upon the face, rendering physiognomy a true science.
We
habit
have
means
Attention
may
:
be
deliberately
manufactured as a
habit by the inattentive. For this is the charm and value about habit that if we begin soon enough, and particularly in childhood,
of ten,
we can
acter
many
lack.
life,
of those valuable
may
The
and
is
easily acquired in
;
The
be taught early.
habit of perfect execution is invaluable, but must Perhaps no other mental habit leads
life.
Sloyd
is
the
physical
means by which
;
taught in
is
childhood
but that
what
made,
But we must pass on to moral habits. Now, wish to produce some valuable moral quality
if
we
..
Moral habits.
way
to do
;
it
is
to
difficult
the most
and
uncertain
is
to
To
be always
226
telling a child to
a poor
to
way
of
making
him
so
but to accustom
him
talking exactly as a painter uses his colours in painting, so that his word-picture shall be a faithful copy of
what he
is
water-colours this
describing,
moral value, which, of course, will only strengthen the In a similar way, most moral qualities can be habit.
formed as mental habits
as
and,
if
sufficiently
well established,
to practise
them.
harder to depart from them than " Train up a child in the way that
is
old
he
Courage is really the outcome, in nine cases out of Children can ten, of the habit of facing danger. be trained by habit not to feel pain. In Egypt you
children sucking sugar-cane with their faces almost black with flies that bite painfully. If these approach the face of a European child it screams with
see
fear.
unselfishness,
reverence,
modesty, cleanliness,
endurance, courage,
or
punctuality,
attention,
neatness,
purity,
kindness,
courtesy,
cheerfulness
by
bad
training, of each
and
If this fact
be weighed carefully
influence
for
will be seen
evil
what an unlimited
good or
this
education has.
We
ITS
EDUCATION
227
cannot say more about it now. Those parents who wish to study it in detail should read C. Mason's works
on the subject.
;
Punishment,
form
of discipline
that
is,
arbitrary infliction of
.
as
Natural
corrective
discipline.
and when
seen in
"
its
it
gets the habit of this, discipline will be true and corrective light.
effect.
This generates right conception of cause and Proper conduct in life is much better guaranteed
when
the good and evil consequences of actions are understood than when they are merely believed on authority.
child
who
who
misses a gratifica-
know-
ledge of causation.
of artificial
It is a vice of the common system rewards and punishments, long since noted
by the
that
by
gations
it
and
will be recog-
Lastly, and very briefly, we must turn to the parents' " Education is a life," not only part in this education.
1
C. Mason, Hume, Education, and Parents and Children. Herbert Spencer. Education, pp. 109, 110.
Kegan
Paul.
228
a living process, but an inspiring life to be lived by the parent, who is to be the ideal, the example, the model, the inspirer.
Plato shows the best training for boys does not conEducation by ^^ f precepts and rules, but in letting them
continually see admonishes others to do.
example.
Here
is
break down.
nursery with a truthful atmosphere, to give him the if he hears the father and
exhibit
living action
are
seeking to imprint
mind.
"
observes, because
ingenuous eyes, because he judges only what he what he sees is to him the only thing
*
or disorder prevailing in the transferred unconsciously by the child to the mental and moral state of the world.
house
"
As mental
instruction
is
by
visible illustrations, so is
by means of
child's
living examples.
And where is the child not in his home? The who are always about
2nd
edition, p. 71.
ITS
EDUCATION
229
whom
"
:
he depends, those
1
whom
he
whom
he knows best."
The members
and
this
feeling.
If
bflkyof
permeated by a noble a sincere piety, religious faith will take root in the heart of the children. To the child the family should be
is
of the family
the symbol of the order in the world from the parents one should derive by idealisation the characteristics of
;
the Deity.
is
God
;
Father
one."
way
the
the parent
unconsciously
Again
"
:
Where can
man
be built up so readily or so permanently as in the home of his childhood, from the living example and experience,
spiritual atmosphere which the parental hearth supplies? On the parents, therefore, responsibility for the moral (unconscious)
and
character
of their
children
fall.
things, continue to
relations
active willing obedience is the strictly natural response of the child to the loyal fulfilment by the parent of
his natural
and organic
parents and
children.
child
:
1
230
Benevolence.
Consistency.
Service.
Parent's Prevenience.
Love
Affection.
Child's Obedience.
Sympathy.
Help
Expectation
Service.
Reverence.
Experience Guidance.
Wisdom.
"
Encouragement.
Experience
Loyalty.
Perseverance.
Trustworthiness.
Security.
Admiration."
The
sense of duty
may
arise
This
spiritual
from those we
fertilisation.
transference takes place most readily It takes place love, trust, and admire.
freely (unconsciously)
by a process analogous
office
is
to organic
The
parent's
to develop within
and strong. This can only be effected through active contact with environment, material and spiritual, through the wise use of
will, free, wise,
the careful
and
ideals."
We have
is
dis-
tinguishing characteristics, love and sense of justice. Now the mother ought specially to represent the ideal and example of the one, the father of the other.
With
Parents as
inspirers.
regard to the mother's influence, Preyer remarks: "Here must not be forgotten the
suggestive
effects
of
the
conduct
of
the
mother.
*
Every
look,
every
ITS
EDUCATION
231
without the knowledge of the mother or nurse, suggestive to the child, i.e., they determine his mental
representation, and, later, his actions."
!
each
member
of
selfishness,
girls often
vanity or hypocrisy with unerring eye. grasp truths sooner than boys, and hold
And
them more
There
'
is
no way
'
needs be
inspirers
as the
atmosphere about a planet, the thought-environment of the child, from which he derives those enduring ideas which express themselves as
them hangs,
towards things sordid or things or Divine." 2 lovely, things earthly Parents stand in relation to their own children in
a life-long
'
'
appetency
somewhat the relation of a hypnotiser to his patient. Whatever the mother suggests to the child, the child " Has it cut its finger and unquestionably receives. " " Mother kisses it and makes it Never mind cries ?
!
well,"
and
it
is
well.
"Is
is
it
in a
temper?"
;
''No,"
is
not in a temper he Charlie says mother, happy and loves mother and smiles at her."
"
quite
lo
And,
and behold
by sunshine, and it is all The power of good suggestion wielded by the true. mother is incalculable for good.
!
One
hint and
1
we have
done.
W.
C. Mason, Parents
232
Mothers too
children's.
own
Children
their ideal.
are
born
imitators,
cultivates
and and
the
dis-
mother
is
If the
mother
plays her own unselfishness in making the children the centre of everything, it does not make them unselfish,
but
selfish
To produce
unselfishness in
unselfishness of a deeper type in the parent, that will make the children ever wait on her and think of her first.
And now
conscious education.
leaving rather the direct subject of this chapter and our threefold text, we would like
,
before finally saying good-bye to our child_ hood, to give one or two hints respecting education more or less conscious, and the way in which
,
,
.
the unconscious
scious.
" We are on the Herbert Spencer remarks highway towards the doctrine long ago enunciated by Pestalozzi that education must conform to the natural process of
mental evolution.
success
is
minds go through in their progress to maturity." Frobel's system was a happy combination of the education of the conscious and the unconscious minds,
and he also followed clearly the natural course of mental evolution. The unconscious mind can clearly
1
ITS
EDUCATION
233
be educated through consciousness. Unconscious apperception can be implanted and learnt by conscious
training.
The
difference in result
of the conscious
noting.
A man
between the training and unconscious in after life is worth whose consciousness is better trained-
than his unconscious mind will only betray bad manners when off guard his conscious actions will be
;
than he
is
we say he will appear better while, on the other hand, a man whose
unconscious mind has been thoroughly trained and educated, will have better instincts than conscious
actions,
scious.
and he
will
be at his best
these two types, and can clearly see the difference between the results of training the Conscious and Unconscious.
all
We
know
Schools as a rule train the former, home the latter. The principle of the infant school most knowledge in
should
never be imi-
The guiding principle in all training is not to develop or excite faculties, but to feed them, delaying their display, always thus training for remote, and not for
immediate results; and above all, not to over-train, for this is one of the great practical results of recognising the powers of the unconscious mind, that
once,
if
we
see at
at
we have
for
a certain
if
sum
total of
mental force
amount
may
be taken.
234
is
This gives the reason why, when all the mental force used in direct education and over-pressure ensues,
is
physical growth
stunted or arrested.
Fortunately now, there is increasing conformity in artificial education of the conscious, to the earlier natural education of the unconscious.
the
It
this
latter
On the school lessons begin. mind educated all the unconscious is contrary, being through. Knowledge has been divided into practical
education ceases
when
(which
unconscious) and rational (which scious), and these two go on together. And now a hint as to details.
is
is
con-
The
true
order of
conscious
education
is
"
from
the known to the unknown, from the simple to the complex, from the concrete to the
abstract,"
1
and
if
this order
were carefully
observed in
all
studies from
study of Christianity and the Bible, fewer blunders would be made and far more satisfactory results would
be obtained.
Discrimination and exact observation by contrast and comparison through the senses should be carefully
taught, and all sensations should be cultivated to the The difficulty here, as last extent by discrimination. " that there is a has remarked, is, great Preyer
want of discriminating terms in tastes, smells, touch, "2 with dewhile colours and sounds are well supplied
1
Prof.
W.
ITS
EDUCATION
235
Ox course words alone can do Utile scriptive words. no words can teach the difference between red and
;
green, nevertheless sense discrimination carried far without words to register its
cannot
be
discoveries.
Again,
it is
knowledge
through as
many
channels as possible.
Hence hearing
a subject as well as reading it is a great help, and the former is often the greater educator. " As a test of the ear and eye impressions received by reading As You Like It,' it was found that when
'
read aloud to the class by the master they repeated it intelligently and understood the characters described;
left to
read, they
meaning.
aural impressions produced a mental 1 appreciation which sight of the page failed to effect."
Good
is
it is
Attention.
the longest period at which it can be fully maintained. This, therefore, should be the
time
is
extent of any one lesson requiring close attention. Attention directed to any subject may be voluntary can fix (conscious) or involuntary (unconscious).
We
our attention by an effort which is sometimes very great, and a time may come when the strongest volition
can no longer resist the other distractions or the sense of fatigue. In children fixed attention is almost im1 R. P. Holleck, Education of the Central Nervous System, 1896. Of course the reason of the above is obviously that in hearing we have Shakespeare's thoughts interpreted through another brain to ours, whereas in reading we have them presented through the unintelligent medium of printed characters.
236
possible,
it be involuntary (unconscious), the so as the will Children slight. being yet power often for not are punished for what attending punished
effort,
short,
attention.
studies art.
the Divine mind in nature, and should precede doctrinal theology on the principle we have already given the
hand.
and the separation of either from the other is sure to be Science prospers exactly in proporthe death of both. The great deeds of philosotion as it is religious.
.
.
.
phers have been less the fruit of their intellect than of the direction of that intellect by an eminently religious
tone of mind."
As a
rule,
first
and the
" Do," and not don't," should be the watchword, and punishments, should not be arbi"What trary, but in the relations of cause and effect.
intellect afterwards.
man sows
And as
a last
word
on the whole subject of child training we cannot do better than direct attention to the profound force of the threefold
maxim
1
of
Holy Writ,
little
"
ones
CHAPTEK
In
XI.
" mind, and to see what claim the term un conscious sensation has to serious recogni.
Is there
unconsekras
sensation
?
tion.
will begin by considering sensation generally and the physical basis on which it rests. will then consider the question of unconscious sensation, and
We
We
finally
mental action, both as cause and effect. First of all, we will quote from those who assert that feeling must
be conscious.
"
Sensation
is
Feeling (sensation) is only another term for consciousness, or the state of being conscious." 1
experience.
"
feeling
and a
language every2 thing is a feeling of which the mind is conscious." " Consciousness is not generally used for states of
1
Brain,
2
John Stuart
Mill,
Elements of Logic,
vol.
mi)
i.,
p. 54.
238
feeling,
gists,
who
for
knowledge
of
them.
something
"
from
merely having a
1
feeling,
Having
; '
two
things the names only are two. "When, instead of the word feeling,' I use the word consciousness,' I use a
tautological expression.
feeling
is
To
say I
it.
am
to
conscious of a
a feeling
is
to say I feel
To have
is
to
have a feeling." 2 " Movement presupposes sensation. Consciousness a bye phenomenon which accompanies the reception
It
of sensory impressions.
ceding sensation; it accompanies it." It will be observed that all these writers only regard sensation as conscious, or even as consciousness.
"
When
Physical
side of conSC10USU6SS
it is
perceived and
is
or it may pass along the sensori-motor arc into some movement, when it is not so certain that it is a conscious power."
4
To reduce
considering habit, the sensation or afferent current arriving at the sensory ganglia in the mid brain may
1
2 s 4
John Stuart Mill, Elements of Logic, vol. i., p. Jas. Mill, Dualism of Human Mind, p. 225.
Dr. A. Hill, paper on From Action Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 198.
54.
239
upwards
to the cortex
may
already given a word of warning, however, against taking these arcs or currents too literally. Montgomery, indeed, believes the connecting medium
We have
between the
is
cells
all,
which
the neuron.
It is highly significant that, contrary to our theoretical expectations, the most accurate observers have hitherto failed to discover any central intercom-
He
"
says
munication between sensory elements. Psychologists and daring or second-rate physiologists have, nevertheThe sensory less, generally assumed such connections.
nerve elements seem to terminate singly
to
come
to
Neuroglia (the ground glass connecting substance in which the nerve elements are embedded) will henceforth have to be considered the
. .
an isolated end."
"
.
medium
in
takes place.
which the synthesis of neural activities But amongst physiologists in general this
essence,
is
deemed the precious embodiment of nerve looked upon as mere nerve cement." 2
In confirmation of this view
of Dr. A. Hill himself, '
the words
Paths of nerve currents,
Ibid., p. 27.
2i0
"In
It is at present but a
little of
'
the
'
ground substance
(neuroglia)
the
nervous system that the hypothesis if not disproved is but the highest likely to remain for long unproved
;
magnifications seem to bear out the opinion that the ground substance is a network, the strands of which
are of almost infinite tenuity.
It is possible that the
down
it
paths, in fact,
l
which sub-
easier to travel."
This last thought exactly accords with that of Sir Michael Foster, quoted in chapter vi., p. 131, and with what we have advanced in chapter viii.
The question
leaving it, we will give the conclusion C. Mercier arrives at as to the nerve currents and the neuroglia.
In a thoroughly organised nerve region the cells are definitely and completely constituted, and their communications are made by
fibres that are also definite
"
cylinder, medullary
But
in a region
which has not completed its organisation, we find that the cells are less definitely constructed, that the fibres
1
Victoria
Institute.
241
are far less demarcated from the matter in which they are embedded. So little indeed are they differentiated
from
it is
often a
work
of difficulty, of delicacy,
lish the difference
and
of
much
;
labour, to estab-
between them
becomes greater the further the fibres are pursued. "In short, it appears that the fibres and the ground
substance in which they are embedded are so closely
alike in constitution that there is
no
difficulty in accept-
ing the conclusion that is pressed upon us by other considerations, that the former are formed out of the
latter
by a
molecules.
we have
by which
it
is
brought
the passage of currents of nerve energy in different directions through the ground
agency
is
substance (neuroglia).
of
it
behind
;
it
a track or
has passed
and,
more im-
permeable, and more easily traversed by subsequent currents. Every subsequent current that passes that way will do its part towards scouring out the channel until
at last a passage will be found, open, free, and readily 1 permeable to currents that are about the mean volume."
Now
SC10US
'
"A
13
242
being
no heed.
appears to pay do not attend to impressions below a certain assignable intensity, nor to those which have
'
'
We
become
habitual, or
intensity.
None
Moreover, a vast number of the strong and varying impressions that are made upon us are perpetually jostling upon, but unable to cross, this threshold
sciousness.
;
the eye, our ego can only discern clearly that As Professor W. its attention is directed. which upon James in his Psychology remarks, ' One of the most
for, like
whole sensory Yet the physical impressions which do of them. " not count are there as much as those which do.' " For all these impressions, whether we are conscious
.
.
.
life is that, although we are moment by impressions from our surface, we notice so very small a part
of
them
or not, leave
They weave
a perceptible or imperceptible thread into the fabric of our life they make a greater or less indent upon our
;
personality.
We
know
that this
is
pressions of
which we were unconscious at the time often emerge when the attention is withdrawn from things around, as in states of illness, in dream or in
reverie."
1
" There is hardly a moment Dr. Waldstein also says when the nerve endings in the skin are not con: .
stantly assailed by sensations of pressure, of temperature, While we of the flux or reflux of the blood supply.
1
Humanitarian, 1895.
243
completely unconscious of
enter
into
all
and
l
increase
self."
be remarked, are not, strictly speaking, "' necessarily J sensations, not being & conFeelings not nected with senses, and may and do exist in necessarily
Feelings,
.
it
may
sensations.
It is
correct to
draw a
It
line
knowing that we
that
feel.
may
2
we cannot
feel
we
feel,
but
1st, Is consciousness to be accepted as co-extensive with the reaction of the sentient organism? 2nd, If
"
not, is
it
the
super-addition of
some
activity in the
brain
which
sensation ?
of certain mental states due to the particular conditions " at the moment ? 3
being unnoticed, can't be recalled by memory, yet these are scarcely to be signified by the name of sensations." 4
"
Unconsciousness
is
a sentient state
not the
entire
absence of sentience
we
attribute to a machine.
No
one would think of calling a machine unconscious or a dog inhuman but we may call a man inhuman,
;
process
may
p. 145.
be un-
2
3
Dr. Waldstein, The Sub-conscicms Self, p. 13. Mill, Dualism, of Human Mind, p. 227. G. H. Lewes, 1'roblems of Life and Mind, prob. 4 James Sully, Intuition and Sensation, p. 64.
James
ii.,
244
Wundt
Wundt
p^eptiSe
sensations.
observes that there must be indifferent (unconscious) sensations, since pleasure and pain are PP 0S ^es which pass over from one to
e th er through a point of indifference. This point must in any case be imperceptible. " Sensuous pleasure always occurs along with a furtherance, and pain with a disturbance, of organic
2
life."
"
An example
of a pleasure (sensation)
is
through the
the matron's pleasure in the new-born child, or the transcendent bliss of the
happy
"
lover."
The sensory
;
which we are
or
4
thoroughly
nearly so
accustomed
us
unconsciously,
we
see
the cerebral centres (cortex) are undoubtedly the seat of clear consciousness, the sensory centres may
"Though
still
be conscious
italics
a fashion of their own." 5 The are ours, and the sentence forcibly reminds us of
after
Lewes' position, who sees consciousness everywhere, as we have stated in an earlier chapter even in the spinal
Maudsley
common
ii.
,
in those
p. 151.
Lotze, Medical Psychology, quoted by Ed. v. Hartniann, the Unconscious, vol. i., p. 252. 3 Ed. v. Hartniann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, p. 251. 4 Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 230. 5 Ibid., p. 243.
Philosophy of
245
know and can know hypnotists and others. nothing of such a consciousness, because it is not our
'consciousness.
We
Throughout
this
work consciousness
is
is
used
not within
its
unconsciousness.
deny, though
we
confess
we
find
difficult to
grasp the
whether individual centres or organs, or possibly Of this we cells, have a consciousness of their own.
it
know
this
work
is
not directly
Our consciousness of sensation is, as has been pointed " out, by no means implicitly to be trusted. Every
sensation
is
which information
incorrect."
Sensations can be truly produced by other means than peripheral irritation. Setting aside all Sensations * \ material agencies, these sensations can un- produced
abnormally.
"
:
am
my
is
sations to those actually produced by expectation in the ideal centres, only we must remember the mind
ideas of sensation.
The
"Whatever mental
1
246
men between
member
hand
;
and
fifty
years ol
and
told
them
on their hands
pricking pains a mayor felt heat a scientific the arm cataleptically fixed to the table. 2
man had
The sensations
in the
hand by thought
are produced
3 expectation of a blow increases the pain felt." Professor Bennet tells a story (already quoted) of a
The
who rushed into a druggist's shop n g rea agony, having, as he explained, slipped and caught his arm on a sharp hook by which he was suspended. He was pale, almost pulseless, and
Ideal
butcher
"
sensations.
in acute pain.
He
off, and yet it was quite uninjured, i hooked." the coat only being "Two medical students were engaged in dissection; one playfully passed the handle of his scalpel across the
who
5
started, shrieked,
and then
confessed that he
felt
edition, vol.
36.
p. 15.
i.,
p. 30.
a
4
Hypnotism, xx., p. 93. ttack Tuke, Mind, and liady, vol. i. p. Prol. H.Minet, Mesmeric Mania <jf 1851,
(
and Mind,
Gratiolet, prob.
La I'kysiugnomie,
i'i.
:
p.
287
see G.
p. 'J.H.
247
examples of mind pain is quoted " by Burton," says Hack Tuke, of a parson's wife in 1607 who, being falsely told by a physician that she was troubled with sciatica, the same night after her
One
of the oldest
fit
of it."
sensation of the teeth on edge may be excited an acid on the teeth (normal irritation), by scraping by
The
from auditory canal, which lies by the side of the nerve, from teeth in a bony canal), by seeing glass about to be scraped (transference from
glass (transference
by association), or by the mere thought of In done (transference from ideal centres). being filled with be each of these cases the mouth may
optic nerve
it
saliva.
on any feeling
felt
(twenty-nine) rested his right arm on the chair with the palm upwards, when he was told to
"A man
look
in
his attention
that
In half a minute he
slight
elec-
pricking,
tricity.
which was
to
tell
intensified to a feeling of
desired
him
me
emphasis on the word now, leading him to think I was conducting some different operation. The result
was the former sensation at once ceased but when I asked him to say what he felt now, the former
;
whispered to his Now his wife so that he could just overhear me, fingers will draw up, his hands be clenched,' which
sensations
all
returned.
then
'
effects
immediately followed.
All
this
time I did
218
absolutely nothing.
or tested before."
"
1
magnet of nine elements speedily saw sparks pouring forth from them like fireworks. Without her knowledge I closed the box in which the magnet was placed, but still the same
appearances were seen." We could of course multiply these instances of special and ordinary sensations produced by the mind ad infinitum, but
2
the
many more would prove ad nauseam, as phenomenon is now so well known and established.
feel
we
produced by
memory.
is
often
the
result
of
unconscious
is
memory
felt
of
similar
positions before.
This
never
Dr. Kellogg,
"
quoted by
Hack
when young he always had to cross a rough arm of the when he was invariably sick. On the boat was an old blind fiddler. The result was
that for years after he never could hear the violin without experiencing nausea."
sat in a
room
to write
sat and studied eight years before. She her feet moving restlessly under the table, and then 1 2 Ibid. Braid, Potver of Mind over Body, p. 17.
249
foot-
Some
^"^^
the mind.
common
in
mental disease.
Soldiers in victory remain practically insensible to cold. Hunger and thirst are modified by the condition
of
the mind.
Thirst
is
often
removed by attention
it is very common Soldiers a battle. of the beginning among soldiers at in battle seldom feel any pain in the wounds until the
being diverted.
On
battle is over.
Carpenter says, and the writer can bear most emphatic testimony to the same fact, that he has often found in speaking, when suffering from severe rheumatic pain, that it has entirely ceased to be
when
it
returned in
full
Pains,
is
well
Dr. Carpenter discusses the question in such instances as to whether the pain has been consciously felt though
not remembered.
;
He
mere
although the changes may occur in assumption the sensorium, they cannot be said to be felt without
for,
consciousness.
in Ireland,
Lord
F. P. Cobbe,
Darwinism,
p. 326.
250
Anglesey,
from
tic-douloureux,
With
produced by
regard to feelings
producing unconsciously psychical effects, Unzer points out that any severe painful sensation inflicted excites the
retaliating or
war
is
even known.
The
In 1882, Braine, of Charing Cross Hospital, as recorded by Tuke, effected complete anaesthesia with a
smell of chloroform, and two tumours were removed. On removing sebaceous scalp the inhaler between the two, the patient (a girl) began to get conscious, but went off again on reapplying it,
clean inhaler and no
and declared she felt nothing all through. Ten years after, he gave air only in an inhaler, and ten teeth were extracted without any pain being felt. The smell of ether three inches from the nose has produced anaesthesia and heavy breathing.
for the first time at
Gratiolet tells us of a law student who, being present an operation on the ear, felt at the
same time such a sharp pain in his own ear that he involuntarily put his hand to it and cried out.
can be strengthened by attention, so can sensation be increased, producing
Observe
severe irritation.
In summing up
Greville, p. 109.
1
we would
say that
ii.,
251
a very small proportion of the afferent currents arriving at the brain produce conscious sensations of any kind.
If the "
term
"
unconscious sensation
"
"
be objected
;
to, let
unconscious irritation
be substituted
on the unconscious
term sensation
and,
furthermore,
we have shown
duced by the unconscious mind, arrested by it, and can produce themselves psychical and physical effects
through its agency. This chapter, which might well be the longest in the book, is one of the shortest, for which the reader will
fear, however, further instances of sensations and mind will have between connection the
be thankful.
We
to be inflicted
to speak of the
CHAPTEE
XII.
We
bram.
unconscious mind with the body and __ .,, We will give examples in connection
,
.
.
effects,
with these relations of physical and psychical and point out the value of the relations we are
considering.
We will
able
power
on the remarkgive some extracts bearing of the unconscious mind over the body.
in addition
to
the
three
which
it
shares in
common
and emotion, has undoubtedly another very important one nutrition, or the general maintenance of the body.
"
The explanation
itself appropriately forms and maintains the body has not only nothing to be said against it, but has all
most
different
departments
and
of
animal
life in its
"The
1
is
such that a
i.
,
Ed.
Hartmaim, PMlosoph
p. 202.
(252)
25.3
mind tends
to
echo
itself at
once in the
body." "If a psychosis or mental state is produced by a neurosis or material nerve state, as pain by a prick,
so also
is
That
is
mental antecedents
vaso-motor
and
"If the brain is an outgrowth from a body corpuscle and is in immediate relation with the structures and
tissues that preceded
it, then, though these continue to have their own action, the brain must be expected to act upon the muscular tissue (whether striped or un-
system
itself."
these extracts
is
and upon the nervous " " By the word brain all through obviously meant its mental powers,
short, the
by the
will
is
In willing any conscious act, " the unconscious evoked to institute means to bring about
the
This psychic
effect.
.
Thus,
.
if
unconscious. .... ,, , vary secretion, the conscious willing of this effect excites the unconscious will to institute the
.
power
is
vol.
4
i.,
p.2.
Ibid., p. 16.
254
necessary means. Mothers are said to be able to provide through the will a more copious secretion, if the sight of the child arouses in them the will to suckle. There
perspire voluntarily. I now possess the instantaneously reducing the severest hiccoughs to silence by my own will, while it was formerly a source of great inconvenience to me." *
of
are people
who
power
"An
cause,
irritation to cough,
may be permanently suppressed by the will. I believe we might possess a far greater voluntary power over our bodily functions if we were only accustomed
from childhood
to institute experiments
2
and to practise
ourselves therein."
Many
scious
is
some
agency
of the
uncon-
mind
probably new.
The
tant
"
:
following
conclusion, however,
is
very impor-
We have
mind on the body, without exception, is only possible by means of an unconscious will; that such
of the
will can be called forth partly by means of a conscious will, partly also through the conscious idea of the effect, without conscious will, and even in
3 opposition to the conscious will ". The following is a reference to the obscure effect of
an unconscious
Ed.
v.
Hartmann, Philosophy of
3
Ibid., p. 179.
i.
p. 178.
255
know at night the cortex (here, as we take it, Professor Clouston refers not to consciousness which
has
its
We
mind)
is
in a
from
its
Do
Are
not
all
febrile
affections
become worse
at night ?
?
not
all
mental
affections
Neuroses, epilepsy, spasmodic diseases are all aggravated. Most people die in the early hours of the morning." 1 " Mental cannot be referred to as
phenomena
bodily
effects to causes,
but there
is
a uniform co-ordination
definite
physical
the
brain.
proonly be
regarded as a parallelism of two causal series side by side, but never directly interfering with each other, in virtue of the incompatibility of their terms. It is
2
spirit
and ex-
mould
it
for a dwelling
it
its uses,
before
enters into
3 possession by sensibility and intelligence." The relations of qualities of mind with the charac-
teristics of
Dogs, whales have horses, elephants, increasingly 1 beautiful and numerous convolutions, but
...
same
Relations of
mind and
brain.
their
in the
ratio.
Monkeys
Prof. Clouston, British Medical Journal, 18th Jan., 1896. s Noah Porter, Wundt. Intellect, p. 39.
Human
256
have no convolutions, only commencing fissures, and, though smooth, are most like human brains, and yet in
intelligence,
etc.,
are
far
human
It
may
on by the human brain, that it is roughly computed (Meynert) to have some six hundred million separate nerve cells. Later calculations
vast range of
work
carried
throw doubt on
"
this.
motor and trophic centres." 3 The mental centres in the cortex have, we may here
remark, the power of directly influencing physiological
functions and tissue nutrition.
Of
this
we
shall give
some remarkable instances when we come to speak of the unconscious mind and nutrition. Going to sleep is undoubtedly largely the result of suggestions from the
unconscious mind, which also brings a general feeling into consciousness when, on waking, enough sleep has
been had
sufficient.
or,
it
"The general bodily feeling which results from the sense of the different organic processes is not attended with any definite consciousness." 4
But
1 2 3
de-
Buffon, Natural History, vol. iv. p. 61. Prof. Clouston, British Medical Journal, 18th Jan., 1896. See British MedicalJournal, 9th Oct., 1897.
p. 254.
257
the body love with the heart and the liver, while to arrive at R e ation of with melancholy 1* the highest point of mental insight, there has J^foj^J the bod yalways been a tendency to direct the thoughts
parts
of
)
11
here
the great solar plexus, chief centre of the sympathetic system. Many feelings are connected with this
region,
and we speak of a sickening story, sickening thoughts, etc. The Bible spealfs of "bowels of mercies,"
"straitened in your own bowels," etc. The organic or vegetative functions as well as the skin
and hair are specially affected by the emotions. A short time of extreme trouble may make a man look many
years older than before it commenced. The eye will lose its brightness, the face will become withered, the
Fear
may
check
lady saw a heavy dish fall on her child's hand, She felt great pain in cutting off three of the fingers. her hand, and on examination the corresponding three
"A
were swollen and inflamed. In twenty-four hours cisions were made, and pus evacuated."
1
in-
"
The
influence of the
most
dissimilar emotions
e.g.,
on
the functions of secretion are well known, and anger on bile and milk." 2
vexation
unconscious mind as revealed by hypnotism can exercise marvellous control over the nervous, vasomotor, and circulatory and other systems.
1
"The
A hypnotised
Dr. Carta:, Pathology and Treatment of Hysteria, p. 24. Ed. v. ITartiuann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. i., p. 18L
17
258
can
1
inhale
strong
ammonia
watery eyes. There seems no reasonable grounds for doubting that, in certain chosen subjects, congestion, burns,
"
blisters, raised papules,
expectation," says Braid, "of a belief of something about to happen is quite sufficient to change the 3 physical action of any part." " The sensation of heat and cold can be abolished
"The
by
the unconscious mind, and high temperature produced 4 in the blood by the same agency without disease."
In
hysteria
the
unconscious
morbid
feeling,
"
We
talk
shiver,
we hunger and
and laugh and weep, we blush and we sweat, we digest and defsecate all
through the brain cortex. There is not one of these physiological acts but can be instantly arrested by a mental act." 5
not perhaps literally correct, if only a conscious mental act is meant, as in the case of blushing,
This
is
W.
James, Psychology,
vol.
ii.,
p. 602.
Ibid., p. 612.
Braid,
p. 6.
who
Excluding, of course, deception, as in the patient mentioned elsewhere, could always produce a temperature of 110 in the mouth by compressing the bulb with her teeth. 8 Prof, Clouston, British Medical Journal, 18th Jan., 1896.
4
259
the mental act must be excited unconsciously to have the greatest effect.
The
and
it
effects of a
purgative
pill
nil
was an opiate dose of colocynth and pill, though consisting of a strong calomel. On the other hand, an opium pill given for
has produced sleep in the
sleep has failed to produce
it,
it
was
so intended.
Laughter stamps a merry look on the face, which, by degrees, becomes permanent, and tends to produce a
happy disposition. If you set your face truly press any passion, you tend to feel that passion.
to ex-
drunkenness can be produced by drinking vinegar as champagne. There is no limit to the power of illusions or to their variety but your own
complete
fit
"A
of
power
as
of invention.
On
we have seen, may be entirely abolished." Here is a good illustration from Braid "I passed a gold pencil-case from the wrist
:
to the
fingers ends of alady fifty-six years old without touching her, and she experienced a creeping,
-
1-
twitching sensation in that hand until it came quite unpleasant. On getting her to
beresults
made no movement
at
all,
the whole being evidently caused by the power of the mind in causing a physical action of the body. With another lady I took a pair of scissors and passed them
over her hand laid upon the table from the wrist downwards without contact. She immediately felt a creep-
260
ing sensation followed by spasmodic twitching of the muscles so as to toss the hand from the table. I then
desired her to place her other hand on the table, so that she might not observe what was being done, and in the same length of time similar phenomena were
I then told her manifested, though I did nothing. her hand would become cold, and it was so then in;
tensely hot."
The following is also from Braid " A London physician who mesmerised by the use of a powerful magnet had a patient in a magnetic sleep. He told me the mere touch of a magnet on a limb
:
would
case.
at
once
now
which
at
pocket which was quite as powerful, and offered to operate on his patient, whom I had never seen before,
I entered
the room.
My
instrument was only three inches long, as thick as a I told him, when put into quill, with a ring at the end. her hands, both arms would become rigid, and such
was the
case.
and again returned it in another position, and told him now it would have the reverse effect, and she would not
it and now, if her hand was forcibly would open of itself, and such was the case, to the great surprise of the doctor, who wanted to know what had been done to the instrument to invest
be able to hold
closed on
it, it
with this opposite power. This I declined to tell, him till he had seen the following proofs of its remarkit
1
Braid,
Power of Mind
over
Body,
p. 15.
26!
I told
it
him
it
on either
would cause
case.
to rise
and become
rigid,
and such
was the
rigidity,
That a second touch would relax the and cause it to fall, which proved to be a fact.
I then applied the ring of my instruthe third ment to finger of her right hand, from which it was suspended, and told the doctor it would send her
asleep
to this
felt
he
'
replied,
it.
It
never will
'.
I told
him
again I
sure of
We
then were
silent
and she
speedily went
to sleep.
on
it
hand, and
to sleep
when
it
was
placed there. He said she would, and steadily gazed at her to send her off. After some time he asked her if
feel sleepy, to
which she
'
replied,
Not
at
which I
to sleep,
then
roused her, and made her go to sleep again by looking I then exat the nail of the thumb of the left hand.
plained to
the doctor that the wonderful instrument
which
my
port-
In a factory at Hebden Bridge in 1787 a girl popped mouse into the bosom of another girl. She got a fit. The next day three more girls had fits. On 17th February, the next day, six more. The works were stopped, as it was supposed to arise from a bag of cotton.
a
1
Braid,
Power of Mind
over
Body, pp.
32, 33.
262
On
the
more had
fifteen
lasting
from
hours.
A When
till
1 scious mind) with the electrical machine. " young lady gave her father laudanum in mistake.
he died she was struck down, and lay ten months in. There was a
examination, and there was no cause of death but dropsy from mental causes." 2 Generally speaking, the quality of mental occupation
influences longevity.
We
More
ex-
will
give a few
of
the unconscious
physfcaiac"
conscfous
mind
Instinctive
fear
is
often
seen in young
will be quiet when carried upstairs by a strange person, but restless when carried down. " An uncultured person telling a story follows it with
children
who
unconscious appropriate gestures. That they are not due to volition is plain from the fact that they follow
the
more
3
surely the
more he
loses
himself
in
the
subject."
Of
all
Frenchman and
unconscious gestures.
1
2 Sir
Hecker's " Epidemics of the Middle Ages," Gentleman's Magazine, 1787. H. Marsh, Dublin Quarterly Journal, vol. xliv., p. 9. 8 Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 303.
26.3
have a servant who, being naturally somewhat mimic, whenever telling me any message unconit
sciously gives
to her.
who gave
it
very curious how we place our body in attitudes corresponding to our mental states, just as we have already seen bodily attitudes may cause mental
It
is
states.
If
we
often put on an intense and strained expression with our eyes. If we are in a state of delight the eyes are
fixed in ecstasy.
to
have a
pleasant or disagreeable taste. How great grief paralyses the body generally ! Falling in love, too, affects the whole body, while the shock
an engagement suddenly may produce profound anaemia, or blanch the hair in twenty-four
of breaking off
hours.
On visiting at houses, a person with a good ear and imitative character soon begins unconsciously to adopt
the voice and mannerism of his hosts.
It is impossible
whole body
being placed in
In pride,
himself".
it
harmony with this idea. has been said, a man seems to " taste
:
Now, as to the importance of all this " The influence of the body on the mind is great, but that of the mind on the body is even i m 0rtance p
greater
;
and a recognition
of
this
truth
is
sdousmlnd
both in the prevention and treat- totliebod y' ment of every form of disease. Every process in the
essential,
26'4
body
liable
to be controlled
influence.
All
functions
may be
1 tinuously influenced by mental causes." do not enter further on the therapeutic value of the mind here, because the subjects require and will re-
We
chapter.
mental action on the body has a far The body has to be trained by the mind, and in saying this we would beg our readers to consider that the process is inof
entirely
voluntary
that
thought
of,
the unconscious mind, so little that does the work, and not the conscious.
is, it is
To
it
we owe
all
being those that are unconscious, so readilv distinguished from the conscious imitation
....
To
it
we
put on artificially by the force of the will. owe the carriage of the body, so that you can
gait, his postures, his
._
manner and
its
mind
in
nobility or
He
is
a dull scholar,"
"
Edinburgh stand representagroups paying homage to him. If you get a back view of any of these you see unconscious mind impressed on matter, and can tell at once the sailor <ar soldier,
1
Laws of
Vital Farce,
2nd
edition, p. 46.
265
Look
is
at the
body and
body
of a
man who
has
lost his
sot, of a
Compare the
two questions First, are these different expressions of body and face due essentially to physical or psychical causes? And, secondly, do these psychical causes act on the facial and other muscles in consciousness or
:
out of consciousness?
The only
possible answers to
this fact,
were no
we each have
r
within us an
unconscious psychical pow er (here called unconscious mind) which has sufficient force to act upon the body
CHAPTEE
XIII.
Sight.
^e
and important subgroun ^ by emphasizing
In entering upon
aii senses are psy-
this interesting
60 *' J
* et
us c * ear
and indeed
not physical.
the sufficiently obvious fact that the special, all, sensations are psychical and
The apparatus
is
common
functions of the mind, not of the body while the media which appropriately convey to the brain the various vibrations which the mind recognises under
these names, are
all
The
it is
impressed. This impression is thence conveyed by nerve vibrations, first to the mid-brain (optic lobes), and then, if the picture is to be corisciously "seen," to the cortex
(occipital
region).
Until,
therefore,
the
vibrations
".
reach
the
cortex, there is
first
journey
we
the
mind
Anyhow,
there are
267
the retina, the physical or of vision the centre ganglia {corpora quadriorganic gemina) in the mid-brain, the unconscious centres of
;
vision.
psychical centre and the ganglia in the corThe order of detex, the conscious psychical centre.
;
velopment is also the same as that here given. As far as we know, all the special senses have thus three centres physical and unconscious and conscious psychical.
has been proved by Herman Munk, in Germany, to be in the occipital region, that of speech being similarly proved to be in the left parietal region
This
last
by Broca of Paris.
As stated in a previous chapter, we do not absolutely dogmatise on the correspondence of the two cerebral centres with the spheres of consciousness and unconsciousness but we do say, from their position respec;
at least probable they are used for these two at any rate we emphatically state that and purposes, conscious and unconscious mental vision does take
tively,
it is
place,
We
whether these centres correspond with it or not. think they do, and we are not alone in so thinking,
and we
will give this proof for what it is worth. " Destruction of the retina produces physical blind-
and further, we have psychical blindness (Ferrier) some considerable evidence that destruction of the
;
cortical centre alone, leaving the mid-brain centre untouched, destroys consciousness of sight only, and the unconscious vision remains and serves to guide the animal
up corn,
etc.)."
268
The next
irritation of
that a deaf
noises,
and a blind
caL^St
sensations.
tne irritation or vibration of the psychical s ight centres need not be received from light
or sound, or from the physical centres or apparatus at all. The physical centres may be irritated by a blow or
by drugs, and this may cause flashes or abnormal vision without any light at all, as in a blow on the closed eyes
in the dark, or,
on the other hand, can be set in motion sound being inby distinguishable from that produced in the normal way. We give one or two instances as to drugs.
ideal centres, the resulting sight or
Dr. Mitchell Bruce, after taking five fifteen-grain doses of salicylate of soda, found they caused visions of
unpleasant faces when the eyes were closed. Cannabis Indica (Indian hemp) causes visual hallucinations
;
Quinine
may
cause definite
sounds
like a barrel-organ.
Dr. Lauder Brunton saw a light spot with rainbow colours round continuously, after taking nearly one
pure ideal excitation. " There is no sensat"on, general or special, excited by Pure ideas agents acting upon the body from without, -which cannot also be excited from within siglKensations.
1
the sensory
centres."
Sl'l
CIAL SENSES
269
know
when
shorthand outlines while the man is speaking. " Talma said when he entered on the stage he was
by the power of the will, to banish the audience from his sight and to substitute in their place so many skeletons. This gave such an impulse to his acting as
able,
to produce the
most
startling effect." in a
friend of Dr.
Tuke
crowd
clearly
saw himself
calcula-
Professor Beer, of Bonn, is able in the same light to contract or dilate his pupil at will, by 2 thinking of darkness or light."
picted by his brain.
'
lished
Highlands, has been well estabthe researches of the Psychical Second by Research Society. Here peasants and farmers slght
sight, in the
Second
walking along the road see funeral processions, etc., with such vividness that they step out of the way to
avoid them, and can
tell
who
compose them.
a gentleman who, wh'en he fixed his thoughts intently on an imaginary object, could see
Sir B. Brodie
it projected upon the opposite wall with all the distinctness of reality. " A piece of green paper is exactly covered by a piece of transparent white paper the latter appears greenish
;
knew
owing
1
to the
shimmer through
vol.
ii.
,
it
of the
under green.
2
p. 147.
Ibid.
p. 167.
270
inserted
piece of grey paper about the size of a wafer is then between these two. The normal colour of
such a grey spot, seen through white transparent paper, will be that of a dull white but now is it neither grey
;
Perhaps you
is
owing
green ground that this rose-red so. For leaving the papers just as they are, the rose-red appearance vanishes directly you bring another
Not
piece of grey paper near the first, but on the thin covering paper instead of tender it having seen the rose
;
reappear directly the second piece of grey paper is removed. That the colour is not produced by the direct stimulation of sense, but
it
of
an unconscious judgment,
the paradoxical explanation of this surprising fact." 1 At the Leeds meeting of the British Association,
.
Professor Stivelly gave the following anecdote " One morning, soon after breakfast, I
.
swarm.
stood gazing at a hive of bees just beginning to They were dashing rapidly about against the
most curious yet regular confusion. In the evening, as it grew dark, I again went out to see the beehive, and was much surprised to see, as I thought, multitudes of large flies coursing about in the
bright sky in a
air.
taken, as she
flies
sister-in-law, who said I must be mishad never seen an evening on which so few were abroad. Soon after, in my bedroom, when I
I told
my
knelt to
1
my
prayers, I
was surprised
to see
between
p. 273.
me
iii.,
271
in rapid whirling
motion, as in the morning. This scene continued as long as I remained awake, nor had it entirely faded by
the next night, though
much
less vivid."
The
tails of
when
many, and also day dreams, as, in town, on closing the eyes one sees the country house with the garden and orchard,
the vision being greatly intensified if there are any helpful associations through other senses to support the
ideal vision,
landscape or
room
such as the
hum
is
of a bluebottle in the
Even
sounds.
in
sleep
the vision
aided by adventitious
The
facts
of
hypnotism
which we
We
But
fEJd^y
S1 g htcentres -
in
dition.
ment
Dr. Bain says: "It has been determined by experithat persistent imagination of a bright colour
Still
more, however, a
at,
G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, problem A. Baiu, Mind and Body, p. 90.
iii.,
p. 273.
27-2
And
we may
Radestock.
He
immaterial to a person whether he always perceives the same object or nothing but Bain thinks he should
;
have said
a well-known fact that an on our senses has the same inunchanged impression fluence as none at all. A change of impression,'
wholly,' for
it
'
is
'
says Bain,
it.'"
1
'
is
necessary
if
we
shall
grow conscious
of
Quite so
same to consciousness ". Bain might have added " wholly the same to conscious?iess ". Both these, it will be observed, rashly conclude, because the same object soon
ceases to have any conscious effect, that, therefore,
none
it
has
writers could never have been betrayed were the deliberate ignoring of the unconscious.
see in
not for
Now we
hypnotism that the persistent gazing at the same object has a very marked effect, and is by no means the same as rot seeing at all and it is undoubtedly true that when an object no longer affects us con;
sciously,
it
still
has unconscious
effects.
It is very curious
nearly
always
It
would appear that vibrations entering the brain by this channel have a more potent and sudden effect in altering the condition of the mind and conway.
sciousness than by any other. Professor Binet of the Sorbonne says: "If
1
we
close the
p. 97.
273
series of
.
words in diminishmeIia
'
ing type, some of which the worse eye cannot 1 11 1 M read at that distance, and then place a pencil
in the subject's
The employment of automatic writing illegible. thus shows that the subject does (unconsciously) perceive the letters, the arm being hystero-anaesthetic '." x
found
'
Bergson reports that a hypnotic subject read a book held by the operator from its reflection in the cornea of
the operator's eye."
2
"
London,
together with a physician from Nancy, who happened to be over here, simultaneously hypnotised some ten or twelve patients who were waiting for treatment in his
who had all been hypnotised at The two doctors then arranged
them round the table and directed their attention to a Turk who, they told them, was sitting cross-legged upon The patients all declared they saw him, and as the it. details were successively suggested, so the man became The doctors then told them clearly visible to them. they would see him slowly rise from the table and This was gradually disappear through the ceiling.
watched with intense earnestness until the last trace of the Turk had disappeared through the ceiling. They
were bidden to remember what they had seen and
1
Prof. Binet,
A Iterations
de la Personality, p. 120
vol.
ii.,
W.
James, Psychology,
p. 609.
18
274
My
friend assured
me
that
if
on
oath in a witness-box, what they had seen, and what had never occurred, in perfect good faith, and he considered that this example threw a great deal of light on the powers of ideas over vision, and showed also how ghost stories and appearances at seances might be described in good faith though never seen, through the
beholders being temporarily in a hypnotic condition. This indeed is a more common phenomenon than most
are aware
of.
The
lady friend stating that, when in bed with a girl about eighteen, the night before she woke up and found this
up in a hypnotic trance, and on looking on the opposite wall saw a bright reflection of the moonlight from a bit of glass, from looking at which the
girl sitting
.
girl
She probably had got unconsciously hypnotised. to this how was to be avoided for wanted know the had great
difficulty in
future, as she
waking
her.
So
far
we have
Now for
sciously aided by association. Professor Binet tells us of Dr. A., who, with his
full
Ideas aided
mind
byassocia-
He
an examination on botany, walked past a restaurant and saw on the door " Verbascum ".
of
The unconscious connection instantane" his mind was that bouillon blanc "is the in formed ously
"Bouillon".
Mullein
"
or
"
275
Hack Tuke is responsible for the following The effect of imagination upon the sense of sight shown in the following story. Two merchant
captains, in an inn that
is
sleep in a
room with
Imagination,
to
sight
and
of
a great wag, asked the other if he had ever slept with a corpse before, to which he replied 'No'. 'Then,' said the other, 'are you aware in such
them,
who was
cases, after
filled
with canaries,
When fly about and sing most beautifully?' the candle was put out, his companion heard music, as
which
if
the
room was
full
of canaries, and
avowed that he
He
room was quite them flapping The captain had some excuse
insisting the
full of birds,
that he had
seen and
felt
their
for saying
for his
by
a small whistle."
Professor
Clarke
shows a
short time,
making him
it
only
Yet afterwards,
if
the letter
is
shown by
itself
on a
card and steadily gazed at by the same person, a dim presentation of the picture that was on the card with it
is
seen also.
When
276
crowd
to the roof,
across one of the iron ribs, as the newspapers informed " with us, sickening dread ". But there was no animal
there, only a tattered piece of torn drapery the imagina-
tion
made
like
into an ape.
(Dr. Bramwell.)
manner, probably, stories of Indian jugglers climbing up a rope they throw into the air and disappearing, and such like incredible feats by eye-witnesses
Dublin professor photographing in India with a friend who was sketching, attended one
arise.
In
It is said that a
open
air.
and
realistic
made by
artist,
The two
"
Hack Tuke
George Combe, having been present at an execution, went out of his house the same evening; having put on his hat, he saw in the twilight an image of the executed criminal dangling before him in the air, and he flew back into the house to the light. He then saw about
three inches of the black cord of his hat hanging down in front of his eyes, which so vividly recalled the cord
of the execution that
"A
lady walking to
drinking-fountain having the inscription, If any man She had been thirst, let him come unto Me and drink
'.
occupied about drinking-fountains, and mentioned the fact with pleasure to her friends. They told her
there
much
was none
there,
277
These two actions of the unconscious mind, of " pure " ideal vision and " ideal vision with suggestion," will
come
Now
"
before us again in connection with disease. for an instance or two of unconscious vision
results.
producing conscious
lady in crystal gazing (staring into a piece of ncoiiscious crystal until, consciousness being partly in Ur
J
abeyance, the unconscious comes into view) J^^ious saw a bit of dark wall covered with white result
-
jessamine.
it
somewhere, but had no recollection where. She walked over the ground she had just traversed, and found the
wall,
which she had passed unnoticed." l " She took out her bank-book one day. Shortly afterwards she was gazing at the crystal and saw noShe thought it was some thing but the number, 7694.
cab number, but taking up the bank-book found, to her 2 surprise, it was the number of it." " At another time she destroyed a letter without noting the address. She only remembered the town. After
H House
(The name
initial is
of the
in full, but
letter
only the
given here.)
3 thus, adding the town, and found it was right." Some years ago a clergyman visited Pevensey,
in
of a vivid
impression
? Ibid.
278
of
having seen
before.
there
when he was
eighteen months
a story of
In the
Sjiectator,
the Rev. F.
W. Lang
tells
Fearon Fallows, Astronomer Royal at Cape Town. When Fallows was at Cambridge he saw one night an
apparition of a friend drowned in Cumberland. He was so much impressed by it he told all his friends at Cambridge.
afterwards a friend took up an old newspaper in Fallows' room, with the story of the drowning in it, which Fallows must have read quite
Some weeks
unconsciously while reading hard for mathematics. "We will give two out of many personal instances.
Personal
instances of
unconscious
vision.
money
in
The other day, leaving home for Brighton, I from wag gapped at the door by J a suggestion oo m y unconscious mind that I had not enough my purse. I looked and found only a few
-t-
i-
shillings.
my
sented to
my my conscious mind
was unconsciously and somehow this fact was preat the door.
How
often
such instances.
summer
for a
month,
my
;
my
consulting-room I
2~9
have a weighing-machine with sharp projecting corners, and many a knock I got on my shin when it first came.
We
scious
will
now
uncon9
vision
connection
anduncon"
scious vision.
In everything
blind spot) that
we
is
not seen.
The shadows appropriately by the unconscious mind. of the corneal blood-vessels always fall on the rods and
cones behind (the sight centres), but the unconscious
mind disregards these, and never send their impressions up to consciousness, except when, as Purkinje's images, "they are thrown on fresh, newer elements in a peculiar
way
".
In reading,
less a
we
are unconscious of
all
word
is
misspelt,
when our
attention
at
once
arrested.
In conjuring
tricks, the
impressions that never came from the eye but were furnished from ideal
into consciousness a good
many visual
centres.
Here may be mentioned the perpetual action of the unconscious mind in making us allow for unconscious
perspective with the diminished size of far
objects,
JJ^JjjJJj!
tlve
-
which we
at
once judge to be of
normal
The
size, though apparently only as large as toys. other day I learned its value by the want of it.
280
I
was looking
of a
window,
field
and some
trees.
The
ap-
peared very steep, like the side of a hill, with trees on the top. I am rather short-sighted, and could not for
what appeared the slope of the field was merely it stretching away in the distance, and the moment I corrected the view by the apperception of the perspective element, I saw there was only a very slight slope, and no hill. Sir Charles Wheatstone invented the pseudoscope, which makes convex surfaces appear as conThe
the
realise that
pseudoscope.
moment
by reversing the stereolook it at the interior of a with scopic picture. you the in relief is seen at once, as we are mask, image not accustomed to see the interior of masks, and there
cav6j an(j v ice vers(% )
If
is,
therefore,
it
look with
on the outside
cave with great difficulty, because we are familiar with the convex appearance of the outside. And lastly, if we look at a face with it, it is impossible to see it as concave, as
we
its real
structure.
Zollner finds himself driven to an admission of unconscious influences for an explanation of these pseudoscopic phenomena, which defy the merely physiological
explanation.
remembered Pears' advertisement picture of the three cubes, which can be seen as one on two or two on one, according as the one or
this will be
In connection with
other
suggested to the mind. A man may try to recall a name and look in a directory
is
281
but,
fails to
recognise
(apperceive)
for his
had time to find it he has closed the book he recalls the name, which he could not do when he actually saw it with his eye.
unconscious mind has not yet in his memory. Five minutes after
(Carpenter.) That is to say, the visual impression on the brain, though conscious, fails to recall the mental
image
of
the
mind, which
the
unconscious mind
succeeds in a few minutes in doing. I saw that a ticket collector at Westbourne Park
noticed that
my
ticket,
when
I gave
it
up,
was
for the
and only after he had wrong got nearly to the next carriage did he turn back and
station.
He
said nothing,
took that length of time for the sight message to travel from the retina to his conscious cortical centre and be perceived there.
it.
speak about
It
and note that you observe no great difference between the upper Conscious and lower halves of the letters and figures, visit
at this line of capitals,
Look
Now
how
look at
see
SSSS8888ZZZZXXXXBBBBEEEE
is
that
the
conscious
mey
etc.)
are, but with regard to familiar objects (letters, the lower centre (in the unconscious region) after
a time only sends up material points to the cortex, neglecting minor details, so that we do not see these
objects as they really are.
We,
therefore, do not
view
282
our relatives, familiar faces or our surroundings as a stranger does he sees much that we do not ; and,
:
mentally, as
used.
we
in familiar
if
words
The following
is
headed
"An
Anxious Sportsman'*
in the Daily Telegraph of 8th September, 1896. fired at a bird rising nearly just behind his father.
A boy
"I remarked
"
to
him afterwards," said the father, him to injure me, and mentioned
saw you
".
The
His reply was, "I never even no was so keen on bagging doubt, boy,
In looking through a microscope where attention is given to the object, the other eye can be open without
seeing anything, all messages from it being inhibited before they reach consciousness, as completely as if the
eye was shut. Driving with a lady the other day, I asked, "Did you see those ladies cycling?" "No, I didn't," she replied, " I never see them now ; when they first began I saw them every one."
An American can entirely ignore the board and rail fences and roadside raggedness, that so disfigure his which a country, newly-arrived European is
always
remarking.
stranger in a town
may
be so attracted by what he
sees, as to find
subject.
it impossible to talk on any important Only one special sense can fully enter con-
sciousness at the
same
time.
283
The
Thus
...
we know
image
is far
a thing
is faint
away
if
happened long ago it its in our mind, just as we know an image its impression on the retina is faint.
is
When
a subject
it
relating to
are sent
conscious, in a
way
it
occupied.
When
;
when
;
the
repetition,
until
they go
altogether.
Pursuits,
prayers, theatres, races, tours, scents, tastes, touch, heat and cold, all these lose by constant repetition. Familiarity breeds
contempt.
The country
is
marvellous to
CHAPTEK
XIV.
Heaeing.
mind.
We now
relation
come
it is
to the unconscious
doubt that
present order.
fully
Impressions of sight act more poweron the brain than hearing or touch. 1 Smell, taste
of
all,
as
by
Some
ideal auditory seusa-
years ago, when constantly Called out at nights, * frecl uen tly beard, as I thought, the nightbell ring distinctly.
it
On
going
down
I found
After long practice I could still only distinguish doubtfully between the real bell, the sound of *which was a
little
more vivid, and the ideal. had for some months a clever trained nurse with a
In taking patient who kept shouting loudly at her. her exercise alone out of doors she constantly heard
1 The fact that things heard impress us contradict this, but is due to other reasons.
(284)
285
turned to see
shouts at her ear so absolutely realistic that she always who it was.
sailor
mother's
distinctly
James's cake
"
unconscious power of the church bell has been im" mortalised by Millet in his Angelus ". In the same way, the subtle connection between
stained glass and incense and religious feelings
is
well
all sorts
bands
of music,
is very in the carotid the of blood flow artery, which probably All these sounds would lead us to is close by.)
(This last
erroneous conclusions were their source not deduced by unconscious reason, and so with other sense illusions. Now, as to the action of the unconscious mind on
hearing
"The ear," says Tuke, "often known sounds when it does not
A
I
'
dis-
from
have a
foreign
effect
it ?
The
F. P. Cobbe,
Darwinism,
286
"
one a mother, are sleeping in the same It only bed, when the baby cries in the next room. awakes the mother."
'
waiter asleep could not be roused by shouts of 1 Johnson,' Wilson,' etc., but woke at once at 'Waiter'."
'
"
may
be deaf to
Bells
sorts
all
but the
may J
nessand
made, to which
visit to
be ringing f
"
M. Delboeuf
having paid a
country house which was near a waterfall, the noise of the fall at first almost prevented his hearing the conversation at table.
to attend to
it,
gradually got accustomed not and on the sixth day, on awaking during
it
He
at
all.
In vain he
on going
to the
window
2
He
made
"
the
fall audible."
Unconscious hearing
I
feel
titles
is
illustrated
by the following
of
myself suddenly elated while studying the a collection of books in a shop window.
new book on
sudden mood.
Nothing that I can see can explain I close my eyes and listen. Among
the noises of the street I can distinguish the sounds from a barrel-organ, and I presently recognise the tune it is
playing as an air that I heard long ago in
1
my
first
G. H. Lewes, Physical Basis of Mind, p. 416. G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, prob.
ii.,
p. 190.
287
powerfully moved by sub-conscious impressions many times in the day, and that our actions are often
1 governed by them." If we live near a boiler factory we soon cease to hear it, or if, as in a friend's case, we live near a Familiar
large dairy
night,
it
soons
tortee^conscl0USIiess
-
appears to be in the sub-conscious mind some power of choice as to whether an impulse shall be short-circuited
or sent
up
to the cortex.
if
(See diagram.)
By experience
in the
I find that
move about
fast asleep,
the
when my
her
;
wife
is
room
wake
exactly from habit, for though probably the exact noise has not been heard before,
cannot
be
makes
but rather from an unconscious knowledge of who it. On the other hand, the faintest noise in
opening the door often heard before wakes her up, because it suggests some one else entering. The lower
mind seems
the only sound message requiring the attention of the cortex, and so sends it It is almost like the action of a private secretary up.
to
think
it
is
opening all letters and placing a few before his chief, answering the rest himself. The unconscious mind,
we must remember,
all
is
habits, but in
all
well.
There
is
no doubt as
1
L. Waldstein,
288
frequently arrested in our unconscious brains, and not allowed to rise to the level of consciousness.
of hear-
The Highland woman in the residency gneard wno the distant bagpipes when HaveSeases hearmg. j oc k was approaching to the relief of Lucknow is an illustration. The well-known story of the servant of who, in delirium, spoke in Hebrew twenty-five girl and Greek words and sentences she had overheard when
living with a former
is
a good
instance of the
become apparent. 1 "In Goethe's conversations with Eckermann we read: I know of a case where an old man of the lower classes, on his deathbed, was heard suddenly to recite several Greek passages in the most elegant Greek. ... It was
are in abeyance, the unconscious
'
was commemorise and to declaim Greek sentences. Not until he lay at the point of death fifty years later " 2 did these meaningless words com up again
'
!
ear stopped with wax hears well up to a certain If the wax be taken out the hearing is too acute point. for a time, until the tension is unconsciously readapted.
III., IV.,
An
V.
Taste,
it
The mind
Sense of
taste.
alters taste.
A man
it
away
because
was
t
^ e servan
it
1
brought
in again
he imagini.,
sweet when
ing
was a
fresh supply.
*>
See Coleridge's Literary Biography, new ed., 1848, vol 2 L. Waldstein, The Sub conscious Self, p. 128.
p. 234.
289
of
man who
of cold at the gar without having a sudden sensation A terrible sight always makes my hack of the neck.
So F. Galton records innumerable cases of numerals and shapes. 2 suggesting tastes, smells, colours The taste, or rather sensation, of the teeth on edge
can be produced by the scraping of a slate pencil on a What is the cause? slate, or even by the idea of it. We hear the scraping, and as an unpleasant sound is
composed
of air
waves
of irregular lengths,
it
jars the
nerve auditory nerve. It happens that the auditory lies in a bony canal alongside a nerve that is connected
with the teeth and tongue, and this jarring is communicated from one nerve to another in this canal by
contiguity,
of the
on edge, shortly after the disagreeable teeth being sound is heard. This illustrates the transference of vibration from a nerve of especial sensation to one of
common
sensation.
In the case of the idea of the scratching, this transference was caused by the action of the unconscious
mind.
As
to smell.
The same
stance, can produce on the different special senses respectively, flashes of light or distinct
iG. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and Mind, problem Gallon, Inquiry into the Human Faculty.
iii.,
p. 284.
*F
19
290
tells
us of a Scotch procuratorto
a body, the coffin appeared that he perceived a strong odour of decomposition, which made him so faint he had to leave. On opening the coffin it was
exhume
declared
when
found to be empty."
The
mind
in presenting
mind
is
remarkably illustrated
He was
sent for
aged forty years, body had a most offensive smell, none being perSubsequently, however, the abdomen was perceptible. most offensive abscess discovered. and a opened
man
who had
a delusion that
As
Sense of
touch.
to touch.
Dr. Pearson,
when he
!
first
took up a
globule of potassium and was told it was a " Bless me how heavy it metal, exclaimed,
it
is,"
to be so,
whereas
it
is
excessively light
The
mind.
governed by the Mr. Cumberland has often sat with each hand
and
resting on the
hand
of a friend.
When
eyes they
still felt
his
them
people can recognise friends they have not met for In the years, by the mere contact of their hands.
same way, amongst certain Indians, smell is so cauet that on the darkest night they can scent the approach
291
(Car-
penter.)
Speech.
word
in
conclusion
as
to
speech,
which
is
i
best
the special senses. must F acu ty0 f not here go over the ground again so ex- s P eech haustively covered by C. Bastian, in his lectures reported
treated with
-
We
i.,
on
amnesia, aphasia, aphemia, and like psychic and physical disorders of speech, with what they reveal as to brain
and mind.
The
story
is
so complete
pass it with the remark that it gives the strongest corroboration of unconscious mental processes in connection with speech.
easily accessible as
tells it,
he
that
we
then, content ourselves with giving one or two brief extracts from other writers. " There is a very important distinction between the
We will,
unconscious or sub-conscious reproduction of words, and the sequent conscious and voluntary reproduction of words the latter alone is speech. There
prior
:
.
is
of the brain
evidence for saying generally that it is the right half which acts when the sub-conscious rememleft
when
*
verbal action which we call speech." " The source of language is in the unconscious.
The
clearly
source of
we
perceive that it has never been possible awamoon that the foundations of language should have SC10US mind#
292
"
of speech,
entirely unconscious."
Our unconscious words betray our characters " Every " idle word may very possibly mean every Unconscious speech. unconsidered word, i.e., every word that
betrays
the
real
man's character.
Therefore,
after
uttering an oath a man often declares with honest conviction he never used the expression.
We
does
;
may
do not notice
hear a slang expression or a new song, we it particularly, but the unconscious mind
result is we find ourselves unconsciously the words, or humming the tune shortly repeating and the curious part is, that we can often hear after
and the
if
we
will
do
it
mind, whereas if we try to hum it consciously, it goes from us. After a time, when its conscious impression
has had time to deepen,
we can hum
it
at will.
Ejaculations, swearing and the use of slang words are generally instances of unconscious speech. Words can be unconsciously reproduced that have long lain
" An old Welshman dormant out of consciousness. wh) had left Wales for fifty years and had quite for-
native
language,
spoke
it
frequently in
An
illness
W.
p. 437.
Ibid.
293
illustrations
of
ignored part every part of our life. all know the painful effect when the tone and manner do not correspond with the meaning of the words as when a passage is read in an unknown lan-
how
the action
to
of
this
our minds
is
essential
We
guage, or by a wholly illiterate person. may conclude with an illustration of the action
We
of the unconscious
mind
in perfecting
and
Unconscious
connecting ideas
mind
in
childhood.
Isaac Taylor. "In the seventh year a child uses a vocabulary of one, two, or three thousand words with fully as much
and certainty of recollection as he can do afterwards and the acquirement of this ready use at so early an age seems to imply that the acquisicelerity of utterance
;
tion has
similates ideas
No
been helped by some latent process which asand words in an indissoluble manner." doubt this is true and the process of the unconl
scious deepening and perfecting of complex actions has long been recognised in Germany, where it is said we
learn
skating in
in
winter,
which we have previously shown means, that the movements are unconsciously consolidated and perfected So that when w p apart from our repetition of them.
begin again
we
1
when we
left off.
Isaac Taylor,
CHAPTEE
The
tion of
XV.
General ac-
muscular system, like all other details of the relations of the unconscious mind with the
various systems and organs of the body, will, we are convinced, become a favourite subject
on muscle.
ere long,
for study
and research, bearing as it does so directly and profoundly upon the whole question of the cause and
cure of
many
is
diseases.
It is obvious,
however, that
before this
done the
firmly established, clearly proved, and generally accepted amongst scientific men. It is this which is the primary
object of this work, to establish and prove by
means
of
the weighty and emphatic testimony brought to bear upon the question from many sources. In speaking,
therefore, of the relations of the unconscious
mind with
the various organs and tissues of the body, no more will be attempted here than to seek generally to establish the fact, and point out the consequences flowing from
it
as briefly as possible.
will
give
some evidence
(294)
as to
mind
action gener-
295
on muscle, then as to voluntary and involuntary actions, and then of the action of the unconscious mind
on muscles.
that
Huxley and others take the, to us, untenable position "All acts which take place uncon- Muscle ac-
all reflex
actions are
Ver
mereiy
mechanical.
They
mechanical as those of
automata."
already disproved this in the will give further chapter on habit (chap. vi.). mechanical reflex to this of action now. view objections
We
think
we have
We
with Herbert Spencer 1 that actions that become automatic by frequent repetition cease to be
believe
To
psychical and become physical would lead to the conclusion that when a doctor by laborious study and incessant practice recognises disease intuitively (i.e., by
unconscious mind action), he does so by a mechanical and not a mental act the mental act being allowed to be
;
the quality of the bungling though conscious attempts Further of the tyro to recognise the same disease. " The varying tone of muscles enters as a factor in the general state of sentience, though rarely discriminated
consciously."
And
mechanism, and
{psychical)?
vol.
i.
,
8 G.
p. 499.
3
Ibid.
2J)6
The conception that muscular power is derived from the combustion of food ingredients alone, is altogether unphysiological and functionally erroneous. The contraction of a muscle is a purely mechanical event, but the atomic process on which it is dependent is by no
"
means
itself
a mechanical event.
The power
of
muscle
rests entirely
evolutionary ingrained affinities, and not on the burning of any transient material." 1 It is a thankless task to try to explain what another
its
on
rather obscure.
he says, but the language of the As far as the writer can underrightly to admit a mechanical (or shall
Professor
Montgomery appears
is
;
we
admit that the passage of the exciting current is also a mechanical or, at any rate, physical process but that
;
the sending of this current and the determination of its force is altogether a psychical event, and depends on
other than material agencies. Carpenter observes " There is strong reason to believe the cerebrum has
:
no communication with the external world, otherwise than by its connection with sensori-motor apparatus and that even the movements
called involuntary are
;
the stimulus
which immediately calls the muscles into contraction being supplied from the automatic centres ".
Dr. C. Fere (Salpetriere Hospital) gives a remarkable connection of muscular power with mind.
1
Prof. Ed.
Montgomery
in
Mind^
297
the
is
moment
of intellectual activity,"
he says,
activity
in fvrft
there
momentary
1
increase of voluntary
power of movement." " The idea Johannes Miiller, 1838, says a current a particular motion determines
:
of
muscular
power,
ot
motion independent of the will ". Voluntary muscle action can be made to overcome
al-
involuntary or unconscious action. "A woman who was troubled by wryneck had
in her power to prevent it, by contracting the muscles of the opposite side when she recollected to do
ways
so.
good
illustration of the
we
are
able to
movement would frequently be made by the person, 3 even when the actual signal is withheld." The definite education of the muscles by the will
as in training, learning trades, violin, piano, etc.
trates in various
illus-
Now,
Of the
as to
mUSCleS
is
Voluntary
"
There
no
real
and essential
difference
between voluntary and involuntary actions. They all spring from sensibility. They are
i C.
all
deter-
*
*
viii.
p. 212. vol.
Hartmann, Philosophy of
iii.,
p.
227.
298
mined by
It is convenient to designate
is
some
:
merely a convenience
l
no psychical or physiological insight is gained by it." " While all the muscles can be influenced by the
emotions, only the voluntary muscles can be influenced 2 by the will."
This
is
we
think, accurate
between striped and unstriped muscle. It would appear that the reason is because emotions (undistinction
sympathetic and the nervous whereas our wills (concerebro-spinal systems, or, in other sciously) can only affect the cerebro-spinal
;
words, that messages from the unconscious mind are conveyed by all the nerves those from the conscious
;
mind by the cerebro-spinal nerves alone. " The reflex action of an ideational nerve current is downwards upon the motor centres, and there gives rise to what has been called ideo-motor movement. The energy
may be
excited either
;
voluntary muscles in the latter case (only) taking place either with consciousness or without consciousness." 3
Professor Binet shows that in health, by careful observation, the rudiment of states of double
Simul-
consciousness, clearly seen in mediums, etc., and that if a person is set sdou^action can ^ e perceived, on muscle. ^ wo dissimilar things, as adding a sum ^
conscious
2
8
Mind, p. 373. Hack Tuke, Mind and Body, vol. ii., p. 2. Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 287.
299
rhythmically (voluntarily), or allowed with the other hand to make curls or circles on paper with a pencil
(involuntarily), the
to
the
the greater the irregularity and difficulty of carrythe ing on any voluntary movement, but the easier
1 This is an interesting experiment, involuntary ones. but it seems the voluntary and involuntary occupations the one is too for the two hands are not well chosen
;
sum
little intelligent,
and the other not quite involuntary. The voluntary action should be an unaccustomed,
unrepeated action, not a sequence of exactly the same movements which soon become semi-conscious.
"
The energy
of its
of a
intensity
mental representation.
There
ments.
right
is
a tendency to equalise right and left moveThe ordinary flexion power of a woman in the
is
hand
twenty-three
kilos,
in the left
fifteen.
With
left.
can be raised
and
nice
force
pleasure,
such
;
as
a
as
smell,
augments
smell,
muscular
diminishes
power
it."
2
pain,
disagreeable
Voluntary fixed position of the body is much harder In tableaux vivants it is to maintain than involuntary. almost impossible to keep from moving for more than
1
Prof. Binet.
Mind,
own observations are that the left Fere, Brain, vol. viii., p. 212. nearly always about 5 kilos stronger than the right.
2
My
is
300
hody
much
it.
longer period.
"
frain
from
The intimacy
of the alliance
is
between
l Blushing, blanching, etc., are other instances." Many so-called voluntary acts are highly complicated
Unconscious mtlon
in "erect
involuntary reflex acts. The erect position ^s * a cer ^ am extent, voluntarily assumed
>
;
position.
3U ^
js
wh Hy unconsciously maintained,
through the most complex co-ordination of hundreds of muscles, controlled and regulated by the unconscious
mind, in response to afferent currents brought by the
special
Some may
which governs the co-ordinate movements of equilibrium is essentially physical in character, simply on the
assumption that
not psychical.
all
is
physical and
The
unconscious.
All
is
a good
illustration of
first
acquired co-ordination by the formation of habit, at by conscious effort (then admittedly psychical),
1
A. Bain,
p. 90.
SOI
In further proof of the psychic nature of reflex actions. If a frog * o is touched with acid in various parts
.
its
head,
its
action
is
flex action.
the same, the foot will follow the part touched This action is hardly that of a all over the body. machine. It is a movement adapted to a special end,
and may never have been exactly performed before. These are characteristics of intelligence and will and a choice of means. We have in the reflex act all that
constitutes the psychological except consciousness. The movements with the whole medulla and sen-
sorium
left
are in
many
animals
pigeons,
etc.
more
intelligent
than with the medulla only, showing unconscious special and other sensations by which they are
directed.
(reflexly),
:
the sensibility
on.
primary com
There
is
when we
are unconscious of
In executing a voluntary movement, such as lifting objects of known weight and resistance, we unconsciously
regulate our muscular force to them, so that
if
we
are
cannon
ball, the adjustment formed by our unconscious mind from memory and apperception is clearly shown. The
seen in going up and down stairs when the imagining of a step more or less gives a great jar to the
same
is
302
"A
hill
hood and
insignificant to
what he thought
'
it.
To his childish muscles the climbing was most fatiguing. The man remembers these feelings and unconsciously
reasoning by past experience imagined the than it was." 1
"
'
hill
higher
These impressions
-,
of the
Unconscious muscular
action.
conscious impressions. may regard it as ,-,,, established that even the slightest movement, whether due to conscious or unconscious
i
We
-,
presupposes the unconscious idea of the appropriate central nerve ending, and the unconscious will
volition,
is
already seen that any muscular movement explicable only by the repeated intervention of unconscious volition and thought." 3
"
"
We have
Even
cerebral consciousness
require highly complicated combinations of movement for their execution, into which consciousness never penetrates." 4
All mannerisms, contortions, twitchings, pulling faces, are, as a rule, unconscious actions of the
To resume.
"The
ample
1
of
unconscious cerebration."
2
*
Ed.
v.
vol.
i.,
p. 78.
Ibid., ?. 169.
Dr. G.
Thompson, System
303
The character
of
a man's will
is
written on his
;
physiognomy and the muscular habit of his body as evidence there has been an habitual muscular tension
1 during each operation of will." The idea of yawning or the sight of it, produces it involuntarily, by the ideo-motor as sensori-motor centre
of Carpenter.
"
The
fear,
skin contracts involuntarily (goose flesh) from showing the action of the mind on unstriped
;
muscle
from
fear,
In sleep the mind acts on the muscles unconsciously, as in sleep-walking. A ballet dancer, quoted 1
. .
Muscular
by Dr. Chambard,
tatively to dance,
asleep,
if
told
authori-
action in
began to do so. The hands of the button-makers in Birmingham, already mentioned before, are unconsciously moving
as
at
if
making buttons
as they
streets
meal times.
"
Can there be
more
of
Hume,
mind on muscle,
operation of
directly
the unconscious
action of
that the
is
motion
fully
and
known by
is
to the
last degree
p. 316.
Human
Bigge, 1894,
p. 66.
304
bodily changes.
relish will
lively
remembrance
of
of a pleasant
produce the same expression and the very smack of the reality." x
If a
countenance
person says
something
ridiculous,
you may
smile or frown
or look sceptical,
though your face cannot be seen. "A philosopher walking in a crowded street
Curiosities in
may
be
although he threads his way successfully (uni ,1 consciously) through the crowd, he is not
t
-i
conscious of anything around, and can neither recognise friends nor will he com into collision with thers or
with the lamp-posts.' 2 That is to say, the conscious and unconscious minds, so far from acting together, act
quite apart, as
we have
already seen
unconscious becomes always most apparent when the conscious is in abeyance. Here, though the whole of
the man's conscious
mind
is
use
it
on any passing
mind
is
his
In taking down shorthand notes, my secretary finds she can correctly report an address without having any
clear idea as to the substance of
it.
F.
W. H.
the
Psychical
Research Society, tells a story of a Mrs. E. K. Elliot, who received some letters by post, one of which contained 15 in bank notes.
1
A. Bain,
Mind and
Carpenter,
305
throw the
letters (as
done with)
fire, "when," she says, "I distinctly felt my hand arrested in the act, as though another hand was
gently forcing
it
back.
Much
'
it
Who my
here
'
I called the
husband."
The Eev. E.
K. Elliot says: "I remember my wife describing the above adventure to me at the time, and also that she was nearly fainting from the excitement caused by it ".
not aware of being vain, and seldom wear any jewellery; but of late years I have worn a signet ring on the little finger of the right hand and
Personally, I
;
am
dency in that hand always to be uppermost, folded over the other, and generally more conspicuous. I lost the
another ring a year ago and since then have worn on the little finger of my left hand, hoping as this hand was less in sight I should not look as if I were showing
it
off.
But
to
my
disgust,
my
left
consciously to me, and against my will, now got the trick of folding over the other, and coming uppermost,
itself
observed.
if
we hold
.
a ring by a
Power
of ex-
thread in a narrow glass, and expect it to strike so many times (as when knowing the
pectation in involuntary
action.
hour we expect
side,
it
it
to strike
it)
against
the
will do so.
The expectation
muscles to act
306
is often arrested by the eyes being the guiding sensation of sight being helpful, if not essential even to motion when the will is in abeyance. Thought readers find the object that is hidden by
the muscles of the subject's hands tightening or relaxing as he approaches or recedes from the article not
;
only
so,
is felt to
to perspire as
muscles.
Dr. Tuke
us of a
woman who,
hearing her
husband had a bad accident, got a severe attack of rheumatism in wrists and ankles, and could not move
either.
affect
both voluntary
"
and
of a
in-
the
arm
man
will
effect of his
own
could move, has been seen to be violently jerked by emotion at the sight of a friend "}
strength with which the body seems endowed under the influences of an overwhelm"
The superhuman
is
ing emotion
well known."
can be excited through the sympathetic system by any sort of will but it can be greatly affected by emotional states, particularly in the
;
inhibit
A
1
gentleman endeavouring
B. Carpenter,
3
W.
Ibid., p. 127.
307
power. occasion he could not take a glass of water JSouimSscie i^ ibition off a tray, and kept the servant standing before
-
exercise
On
him
half an
it.
We
all
know
that some are half an hour before they can induce their muscles to swallow a pill, or to take a great jump, or
make
other
unwonted
is
efforts.
Table turning
greater in
public
how
the conscious
mind
unconscious or the actually inhibits the action of the muscles. There is a certain air which I have been able
to play
my
from memory for over thirty years if I abstract mind from the piano and just put my fingers on
If I look at the notes or try the notes and play away. of the air, it is impossible. chord to play even the next
wrong, I cannot proceed, but must the beginning. from Consciously it is begin again
If I play a note
impossible to play
go, I get through
l
it
all right.
Fere, Brain, vol.
viii., p.
212.
CHAPTEE
THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND AND
LUNGS, SKIN,
XVI.
REPRODUCTION.
mind
to these
important organs which we consider in this chapter is due to the fact that its chief action is seen in connection
mind with disease and therapeutics is treated elsewhere, we do no more than barely allude to the subject now.
First, then, let us consider the action (unconsciously)
Action of
t ne
S'onTe
heart.
affected
Gliddon points out that the heart is so by the emotions that it is often
seat.
called
their
A
axe
"
fell
marl about to be beheaded was reprieved before the after his head was on the block, but he had died
Pleasurable emotion gives firmness and regularity to the action of the heart, promotes the circulation of (308)
ITS
ACTION
.30?)
the blood, increases the gastric secretions, and imparts firmness and regularity to the muscular contractions of the stomach."
1
Dr. Leith in his lectures in 1896 on pathology in " Edinburgh was inclined to doubt whether the benefits
of
all
Nauheim
to
(a
treatment for the heart) were not after if not entirely, by the
".
2
Personally,
we
think
Malebranche took up Descartes' treatise De Vhomme and it caused such a violent beating of the heart by its
wonderful power that he was obliged to lay breathe freely.
"
1
it
aside to
subject to
spasm
;
of his
vital parts
instance,
when anxious about any event as, for whether bees would swarm or not, whether
the large cat he was anxious to kill would get away before he could get the gun. After death, however, it
disease."
of the heart
by increased
As
"vital" action, terror does the same in another way. a general principle, pleasurable emotions increase
the vital functions, and painful ones depress them. The action of the heart ife greatly affected by emotions through the sympathetic system
;
it is
quickened
or slowed or even stopped by mental shock through the tenth nerve. The movements of the heart are altered,
" Hack Tuke, Mind and Body. British Medical Journal, Hack Tuke, Mind and Body.
:J
1896, p. 711.
310
attention
and peculiarities of the beat are exaggerated, when There is little eviis closely fixed upon it.
that
dence, however,
Lord Egllnton told John Hunter how, when two soldiers were condemned to be shot, it was arranged the one who threw the number with the dice should
be reprieved the one who proved successful generally 1 fainted, while the one to be shot remained calm."
;
"I have never met," says Eichardson, "with a case of intermittent pulse that was not due to some mental
cause
shock,
fear,
sorrow,
etc."
During the rush of consumptives to Berlin for inoculation by Dr. Koch's tuberculin, a special set Action of 10 " 3 ^ symptoms were observed to follow the inrninTon circuiation. jection and were taken as being diagnostic
of the existence of tuberculosis
;
of temperature after so
many
hours.
mena were
eagerly looked for occurred accurately in several who were injected with
full
of
parts of the bodies of patients in the hypnotic state, well attested and undoubtedly true.
"
37 C. to
SS^
1
C. in a patient
fixed
by
2 Sir
p. 16.
THE UNCONSCIOUS
'
MINI)
AND
ITS
ACTION
311
suggestion, and Dr. Binet has lowered the temperature can it be,' he asks, when of the hand 10 C.
How
'
one merely says to the subject, "your hand will become cold," and the vaso-motor system answers by constricting the artery?
C'est ce que dcpasse notre imagination.'
"
is no way of accounting for such a but by freely admitting the presence of phenomena unconscious psychic forces in the body, capable of so influencing the structures of the body as to produce
Indeed there
The
.
limits of blush_ _
tt
Unconscious
mind and
blushing.
and the scapulae behind but one instance is recorded of the whole body blushing from
shame."
2
other day I had a nerve patient whose heart I wished to examine. As she uncovered the chest
The
I perceived a
rash extending as low as the I found that she habitually middle of the bosom.
scarlet
blushed to this
level.
"We
cardiac
are
two
circulations, the
former controlled by the 3 heart, the latter directly by the nervous system," and it
the latter that
J'
is
is
affected in blushing.
its
saw a child in immediate danger of having She Pain and in crushed by an iron gate. not could but was greatly agitated, move, ^"psychic causes to intense pain coming on in her
lady
ankle
owing
312
She walked home with difficorresponding ankle. culty, took off her stocking and found a circle around the ankle of a light red colour, with a large red spot
on the outer
side.
By
remain in bed
for
some
"A
of
an ab-
scess in the axilla immediately felt pain in that region, followed by inflammation. Dr. Marmise of Bordeaux tells us of a lady's-maid who, when the surgeon put his lancet into her mistress's arm to bleed her, felt the
prick in her own arm, and shortly after there appeared a bruise at the spot." l
St.
long upon
,
the
Stigmata.
his
hands and
succeeded by inflamma-
Louise Lateau bled profusely in her hands and feet, although, on examination of the skin with a strong
lens,
The
papillae
"
It is
fact,
not so well known, but it is nevertheless the that utterly startling physiological changes can be
produced in a hypnotised subject merely by conscious or unconscious mental suggestion. Thus a red scar or
a painful burn, or even a figure of a definite shape, such as a cross or an initial, can be caused to appear on the
ITS
ACTION
SIS
By
creating
some
local
disturbance of the
what
it
would be impossible
perform.
And
where a
of the
ecstatic.
This
is
and adoring gaze of the ecstatic upon the bleeding figure on the crucifix. With the abeyance of the conscious self, the hidden powers emerge, whilst the trance and mimicry of the wounds
arising from the intent
are strictly parallel to the experimental cases previously referred to. May not some of the well-known cases of
mimicrv J
would
in
animal
life
.
originate,
like
.
the
Extended meaning of
below the
level of consciousness,
created by a predominant impression analogous to those producing the stigmata ? That is to say, to reflex actions
excited by an unconscious suggestion derived from the in other words, the dynamic, externalenvironment
;
ising
power
our
of thought,
if
is
unconscious
extend
may
idea
be called thought.
of
'
'
We must,
in fact,
thought
to
wider than
intellection or ideation
these
something much
are special
directing
functional activity
though we may
We will now
1
314
one
strictly
force,
The breath can be altered in rhythm and etc., by the mind consciously and unconsciously,
but only within the limits fixed by the automatic centre, i.e., not so as to endanger life.
can produce a cough, but not a sneeze. Hysterical (or mind) cough, and dyspnoea or short breath are well known. One cannot breathe naturally when
will
The
the action
patient
so,
is
is
brought into
full
consciousness.
When
and
tries
hard to do
Emotions produce a
and the
short
The breath
is
altered
by the emotions.
The
quiet breath of joy contrasts with the long sigh of relief after breathless suspense. Joy gives eupnasa or easy or rather fear tends to dyspnoea or breathing, grief
breathing. Sobbing goes with grief, laughter with joy, and one often merges into the other. Yawndifficult
ing
is
it,
as well as
by
fatigue.
Dr. Morton Prince says a lady he knew always had violent catarrh in the nose (hay fever) if a rose was in the room. He gave her an artificial one and the usual
symptoms
followed.
He then showed
her
it
was a
all
false
symp-
toms disappeared. 1
1
How many
cases of
hay fever
ITS
ACTION
815
proverbially associated with phthisis, and hope and joy exert a marked influence over l the respiration." Respiration is almost suspended in both see and hear best intellectual work. strong
is
sanguine mind
We
more
per.
manent erythemas are common from emotion, Mucous membrane can change into epithe.
and
hair.
lium
to
"
Very remarkable
is
ages answering the purpose when certain morbid products in the interior of a structure have no natural
vent
organ.
the case in
all fistulae
cellular tissue
being converted into the walls of the passage, and into a mucous membrane insentient to the particular matter
carried out.
They cannot
long as the natural outlet is not restored, but then they heal of themselves quickly and easily." 3 Professor Gregory makes a man in an hypnotic state
feel so
are
numb.
vol.
ii.,
p. 130.
p. 154.
Ibid., p. 155.
316
" thought to develop the Od force, and various prick ing sensations were felt, while in drawing it downwards Dr. Braid did a different set of symptoms occurred.
arm behind
a screen,
and
all
the
sensations were
felt
felt
the same
when there was no magnet. The hair may be turned grey and white by emotion
in a
With
Action of
!ii"estive
we may
notice one or
two
lost
in-
stances of unconscious
mind
action.
or s ans
was very
sea-sick
was
in-
stantly cured." If the thoughts are strongly directed to the intestinal canal, as by bread pills, it will produce strong peri-
Vomiting occurs from mental causes, Bad news will proapart from organic brain disease. duce nausea emotion also, or seeing another person
staltic action.
;
vomit, or certain smells or ideas, or thoughts about a sea voyage, etc., or the thought that an emetic has been taken.
The thought
tric juice in
of food produces a copious flow of gasthe stomach and saliva in the mouth.
(i.e.,
Hysterical
ing and gastralgia are all common. " Jaundice has been caused by fits
A medical
THE UNCONSCIOUS
I directed a
MINI)
AND
ITS
ACTION
317
baby to be fed every two hours by day and every four hours by night by the clock; and six weeks after the baby woke naturally at night within
five
The thought
water.
an acid
fruit will
fill
the
mouth with
A
is
successful
way
music
band.
to suck a
lemon within
view of a German
dry rice cannot be
Fear
swallowed.
a murderer.
This
is
Vomiting (natural) in cases of poisoning is not always from stomach irritation. In some cases it is the result
of a protective
mechanism.
Similarly
we
get loss of
influence
Dr. Murchison says there is good evidence that nerve may not only cause functional derangement,
liver.
could not be cured of vomiting young lady was engaged to be married. On being told that the
who
till
Sir James Paget tells us of very severe parotitis or inflammation of the salivary gland occurring in a man
of sixty-nine
of acid food.
(When
l
Sir
318
Persistent dry
mental shock
is
recorded
ring in
Thomas Watson records a case of jaundice occuran unmarried woman when she discovered she
child.
was with
We will
Action of on sex
poind
in early
life.
now touch
The
briefly
on the connection
of the
whole
differing
characteristics
of
manner, habits, tastes and mind of man and woman rise largely from the unconscious part of
the mind, and their whole beauty consists in their unconscious origin.
In the different games and occupations of boys and girls we see this developing even from the nursery, as
in the
marked
amongst
girls,
the habit of
kissing, the
dress, all of
development of modesty and the love of which are different in degree or lacking
amongst boys.
The
feeling of
shame
is
many
savages, and
instinctive
in
all
pregnant
girl of
blind, deaf
and dumb
little
man
away
there
in great fright.
was a man
in the room.
It is
remarkable
at puberty.
how modesty increases unconsciously Kissing boys, common before, ceases now
and
see unby precept, but by instinct. conscious love or sexual selection in animals. A dog will follow another for miles, passing and neglecting all
this not
We
ITS
ACTION
319
is distinct selec-
of
sexual
if
life
they
1
how
far
more fundamental
life."
"Even
"
source
Conscious
The unconscious
of
instinct of love
between ^>^sd^a
source
-
two
tion
human
pletely
succeeding generations for the ideal of the race, i.e., for the ennoblement of the species.
they represent corporeally and mentally the more nearly they approach the
the procreative power
;
acme
of
(in
women, eighteen
to
to twenty-eight
in
men, twenty-four
that
as
thirty-six)
charm
any
other
the
individual
latter's
far
as
possible
;
neutralises
by opposite defects thus producing a child which represents the type of the race in the greatest possible perfection." 3
"
defects
The
instincts
in sexual
life
the higher animals, where consciousness (without this added feeling) might thwart the unconscious instinct
(for the
1
Maudsley, Physiology of Mind, p. 356. Schopenhauer, Welt als W'ille, vol. ii., p. 44. Ed. v. Hartmann, The Philosophy of the Unconscious,
IbUL, p 37 7.
i.,
vol.
p. 223.
320
The
its
Monogamy is instinctive with women, polygamy with men hence, where man rules, polygamy is common where woman has her rights, monogamy. A man can be father to 100 children in a year, a woman
; ;
Now
Action of
uterinede-
as to the
phenomena
of reproduction.
veiopment.
Then
is
no physical
cause discovered
their kind.
why ova
To
As
talk of a
How
matter
a seal or
wax
it
Or
ments
of parts in a solid ?
to regard the
development of
result of a strictly
Though he was a
1
the writer of the above was no psychologist scientific man and an acute thinker, and we
i.,
v. Hartmaiin, The Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. Charles Kingsley, Life, vol. ii, p. 147.
Ed.
p. 224.
ITS
ACTION
321
there are comparatively few that will deny the psychic causes at work. It has been beautifully " an organised being is the product of the unsaid
now
conscious
memory
of an organism
:
".
Herbert Spencer says "It is proved that no germ, animal or vegetable, contains the slightest rudiment,
trace, or indication of the future
organism
since
the
microscope has shown us that the first process set up in every fertilised germ is a process of repeated
spontaneous fissure ending in the production of a mass of cells, not one of which exhibits any special
character
".
secreted
of time.
change
its
character, so as to
become absolutely
The idea of beauty attaching to injurious to the child. the outline of the female bust is probably due at the
bottom
to the unconscious idea of its value in the sus-
tenance of the race, rather than merely to the quality of its curves and lines.
In conclusion,
we
will give
way
in
of the
impress physical characteristics on the offspring. Dr. Lowe, in the British Medical Journal, says that
the lasting effects of pairing in animals, both in the
to
his
mind
conclusive.
He
21
322
only selects about half a dozen experiments, which speak for themselves.
Physical
characteristies
from
psychic
CtHlSGS
He
black and
This sow next, with a red Tarnpigs. worth boar, although there was no black in either of
white
the parents, produced a progeny which were red, black, and white, the patches of black being very conspicuous.
(Duckering breed) had always bred their progeny black. The boar then was put with a white sow for the first time two months
2.
;
later
it
which
then produced a litter of black and white pigs, although there was no white in either of the parents.
3.
same cow, with a shorthorn bull, had another calf, which was still partly Alderney. 4. A smooth fox-terrier, by a rough Scotch-terrier, had rough pups. Afterwards, by a smooth fox-terrier, it had pups which were, many of them, rough-coated, and none were like the parents.
5.
A Manx
cat,
tailless
English
tails
and a portion
The
tailless
tom-cat died
some years
kittens are
6.
up
few tailless
a Brazilian
born.
A fair light-haired
Englishman married
Twenty years after he marlady, but had no children. ried a light-haired English lady, who subsequently had
ITS
ACTION
323
Brazilian in appear-
ance than English. Dr. Lowe can give numbers of different cases of
cows, cats, pigs, rabbits, sheep,
etc.,
examples will sufficiently illustrate this phenomenon. Case No. 6 is alluded to as follows in the next issue
by Dr. Neale
"
The
me
'psy-
her
memory
his
'
for
English wife bore the traces of longcontinued mental impressions rather than the result of
from
fair
many
thoughtful study of these cases will leave the reader with the profound conviction that the cause is undoubtedly psychical and not physical.
The
^^.^
fluence of suggestion.
"
The
getting Laban's flock to breed striped cattle by means of suggestion (Gen. xxx.), testifies to the antiquity of
The mother of Charles Kingsley believed that impressions made on her own mind before the birth of
1
E. J.
Lowe, F.R.S.,
2 Prof.
324
the child for whose coming she longed would be mysand in this faith, for his teriously transmitted to him
;
surroundings of her Devonshire home and in every sight and sound which she hoped would be dear to her
life. These hopes were realised and her son left Devon when he was six weeks old, though and never saw his birth-place till he was a man of
child in after
thirty, it
charm
for
him throughout
1
life.
i.,
p. 4.
CHAPTER
XVII.
We
on
turn to the bearing of the unconscious mind and here we would again remark The mini is " that the simple word mind " would, in the sSousot
disease,
now
author's opinion, be much better than the unC0nscl0lw cumbersome terms " conscious mind " and " unconscious
-
"consciously" or "unconsciously" being added as needed, thus emphasising the unity of the
mind.
used
that
any
For
after all
is,
ourselves
we
think
we have shown
more
are,
lies far
We
conscious
because
it
mind" with almost wearisome frequency, is the very point we have to prove; and
"
alone would be
understood equally to refer to "conscious" or "uncon" scious according to the context. If any prefer the
alternative
formula
it
"mind used
them
substitute
extraordinary
psychologists
We
who
326
mean "mind,"
sciously
".
"conscious
With this explanation we turn to our The advance of medicine, like all else,
Opposition
to mental
rather of the
;
motive power partly from the ups and downs which so lengthen its journey, rather, than entirely from any steady and inherent driving force.
In the dark ages of medicine before the invention of instruments and consequently methods of precision,
much
greater regard was given, though blindly enough, to the psychic factor in disease than now.
The
discoveries
etc.,
in
histology,
animal
chemistry,
and the exquisite instruments used bacteriology, in diagnosis, have so dazzled the eye and filled the mind with the physical factor in disease that the psychic is
well-nigh forgotten, and any reference to it received with scarcely concealed impatience or contempt.
When we
surely
spirits
it
;
can actually see the bacillus tuberculosis, to drivel about the patients'
the enteric ulcer
is laid
when
and the very sight of the perforation in what nonsense to talk of mind influence in evidence, when we can catch and stain, and double typhoid
logical theatre,
;
feeble
it
The reason of the impatience felt when psychic causes are spoken of to the skilled experimentalist is
327
is
some-
nor weigh
it will
thing which even his instruments can neither measure ? He knows that if it is allowed a hearing,
distract attention
field
;
now
holds the
must be dealt with by other methods. The ordinary physician has yet another, and indeed
a better grounded reason for dislike and indifference, and his generally agnostic attitude, and it is this One of the most extraordinary paradoxes of to-day
:
lies in
Q Uac k s
au j
-
medicine wholly un- theircures paralleled in the world's history, there is on every side a
advance in
more than,
quackery that flourishes and triumphs as in the darkest of the dark ages.
much
as, or
darkness disappears. It is not so here. Nor can it be said that it is in the lesser civilised parts of the earth,
where
found.
scientific
medicine
is
rare, that
The
America, and the most enlightened parts of America it is in England, and in the heart of its most intelligent
centres, that quackery flourishes
;
of
Only
last
being made by
the sufferer
still
remains.
328
real cures.
of the
School Board and the higher educational sysIt can show real cures, both
undeniable and numerous, in spite of the vast number that may not bear scrutiny.
alas,
After allowing full deplore it. false testimonials (which are not so
posed)
of
;
numerous
as sup-
for purely
mankind, and there remains behind a large residuum that cannot by any ingenuity be explained away. At any rate, the some disease, say, public believes it has suffered from
rheumatism,
which, in the ordinary course and the absence of the quack, it would have gone to the
for
imaginary diseases and the credulity even for the lesser functional disorders,
nearest doctor
less
with the result of a possible more or and the certainty of a considerable bill. tardy cure, Whereas now, the purchase for 7^d. or Is. l^d. of a small
;
bottle of
something in a wrapper black with testimonials has already given relief, maybe even before it has been taken, on the mere reading of the wonderful cures
effected.
quite possible that no one is more surprised as well as pleased at the cures than the quack vendor
is
Now it
of the
same
but
for,
it is
not for
him
is
to
not account
as the doctor
is
to
promptly
does.
32.0
our
of
,
.
it
.
is
.
by no means that
.
.,
all
men
are fools,
quackery
flourishes.
undoubtedly effects numerous cures, and some if it be not heresy to breathe it that have been attempted in vain by eminent scientific
but
is
because
it
men, the
else
sufferers
having only
tried
quackery when
all
has
failed.
But
let
us
further and glance at the pseudo-religious and quacks humbugs who make a gain of the credulity and folly of mankind without recourse to patent pills or
Is. l|d.
medicines.
abound most,
like the
supposed, in Eussia, or in
the
but in the very focus of intellectual and rational United States of America.
The
greatest
of
these
latter-day mystics
is
un-
Mary Baker
.
Eddy, whose ponderous work on Christian . Science, in two volumes, is the text-book
of the entire sect,
more
numbering certainly half a million or and in here, America, of educated followers far above the average in wealth and culture many, alas
formerly having been among the most lucrative of the physician's patients. This book is appointed to be read
Bible
by Mrs. Eddy in all her churches, side by side with the and in one of her handsome buildings in New
;
their- first
330
English church, not very far from Harley Street, this work is read every Sunday morning to a crowded and
attentive congregation of upper-class educated people. With their dogmas we need not interfere cures are de;
tailed
and vouched
neither
for
as
generally
be doubted or ex-
we hear
of
one i n New Jersey, with 15,000 more or less educated patients in one week. Chicago has been turned upside down with one, amongst others, who
has the walls of the largest hall in the city covered with crutches, splints, etc., presented by cured followers, and
indeed
all
name
of these religious
quacks and humbugs is legion, and their harvest plenteous and golden. Now, though populus vult decipi
is
men
are fools,
still
testified to
enough, largely
;
Many
and many may be said lasting many to be due to hypnotic influence of one sort or another. But, again, what about hypnotism and Nancy and
are very trivial,
Hypnotism.
the Salpetriere ? The investigations of the British Medical Journal have shown that here
to deal with a quite
;
we have
inestimable
amount
of
fraud and self-deception but observe, we have now to examine the work of learned professors, regular and
S3]
registered physicians, and not that of mere charlatans. have, or had, Charcot in France, and names of
We
this country who testify to cures without mec'icine or physical means, but in
this case purely (if the word may be coined) by psy" in the form of suggestions chism suggestions, too,
"
which appear powerless when presented directly to consciousness, and only highly efficacious when the patient
is
in
riddle
All these things are a the "hypnotic" state. and most perplexing, and when the last echo of
the laughter of derision, and the last curve of the smile of contempt have died away, there remains much to
make
ism and
all
many and
.
flourishing Swedish,
.
German, Austrian, Italian and other special terns and curss. Are they unworthy of the name? cures? By no means. Here a semi- or pseudo-scientific basis is more or less attempted, many excellent hygienic formulae are observed, which elevate these above the mere rank quackery we have spoken of. But the great point is that cures, and remarkable cures too, are
everywhere
that
it is
Special sys-
effected.
And
we
here, indeed,
all
may
be added
in our
impossible to say
these are
what
ignorance at present
Is rheumatism a functhough, doubtless, most are. tional or an organic disease? Is dropsy, is erythema, is
eczema,
that
is
paralysis ?
of these
is
Some
are
hyperscientist
may
object
some
But what
332
Nay, more, what is a disease ? And until we can answer this last profound question, how do we know whether it is functional or organic or both ? Our own
broad definition of the two would be that
disease
is
"
functional
"
that which
is
is
that
which
of physical.
At the bottom
all
diseases
involve
But
way
Or
if
of inexplicable cures.
What
Faith-
about Lourdes
posture,
which
it is,
and yet
what about
and others
least
healing
our
own
faith-healing centres
abroad,
uncontaminated by the
sym-
Koman Catholicism or saint-worship ? As these may not be so well known even to the wellinformed physician, a detail or two may be given showpathy with
ing they at any rate exist. A few years ago, in the Agricultural Hall, a great conference of some 2000 faith-healers was held, there
being then some 120 faith-healing centres in this kingdom alone, now probably many more. In America
there are over thirty
homes
6000, presented by a "cured" patient) and innumerThere are several in Australia and many able centres.
all
over Europe.
New York
and
Boston there was hardly a believer in faith-healing, now there are thousands. Observe these have nothing to do with the Christian scientists on the one hand or
the pseudo-fraudulent faith-healers on the other, of whom we have spoken. These are orthodox and mostly
evangelical.
333
Amongst a list of 250 published cases of disease cured we find five consumption, one diseased hip, List of
five
abscess, three
^yearS
-
one cha P el complaint, two throat ulcer, seven nervous debility, nine rheumatism, five diseased heart, two withered arm, four bronchitis, three cancer, two para-
lysed arm, three weak eyes, one ruptured spine (?), five pains in the head. And these are the results in one
The year at one small chapel in the north of London and imlist causes amusement and perhaps surprise patience may be felt that such puerile details should be
!
given.
Pace
my
it
scientific
to the
poor sufferers
suffered, or at
all
puerile to be cured,
charge
for
any rate imagined they suffered, free of none of these are money-making agencies,
?
whatever
What
;
Perhaps
scientists inno-
Not at cently suppose these have died out. and later on we will give instances, charms and all
.
idols.
here to say that not only in the country districts, but it may be in the humbler regions of the physician's own house, they are implicity believed in, and moreover even here also are cures effected.
Suffice
it
about cures by relics and even by idols ? I am told that undoubted cures are effected not only by the Holy Coat of Treves, but all over the world, notably in
What
India,
China and Africa, in the presence of actual idols. One in India is most famous for its therapeutic power while large temples in China are covered with votive
;
334
offerings
But the patience of our cultured reader must not be too severely tried. Turn then with relief to something
more
respectable.
What
Water and
other orthodox medical
cures.
home and
continental
ron
wa t ers a nd
all
baths ?
Does our
diet,
and the
or does he not think there must be a ; " " something else as well ? And to come nearer home
and the
air
of all things,
of all
secrets
in his
own
with cures, aye and diseases too, the cause of which he cannot account for and is he not often surprised to find
;
a continuation of the same treatment originated by the local practitioner is, when continued by his august self,
efficacious ?
And is not the local practitioner not only but disgusted as well to find such is the case ? surprised But we have asked hard questions enough. will
We
By what
agent are all .such cures
a sk
an easy one.
in
What
cures,
is
the
effectual
agency
mainly
effected?
cures of
quack
sorts,
in
semi-scientific
all
charm, and
idol cures, in
many
some
335
or of the prismatic electricity for the sulphate of soda or magnesium and even for the value of real B.P.
drugs,
we must answer
of the unconscious
power
and
this pre-eminently
is
and
it
is
this,
and
this pre-
eminently that
much
Now we
this,
see
and here
"
is
inexplicable
It at once gives a position. agnostic sort of locus standi to the unregistered and unqualified
all denominations not only admitting a scientific reason for them, but cures, giving probably unknown to themselves. And worse still, it
therapeutists of
their
first
sight on
somewhat
of the
same
many
by the
it is
;
same means.
Further and worthier thoughts
will reveal that
vain to fight against truth for any secondary reasons and the question is Is it true?
We
it is
:
who
really
honour
this subject
with their grave and careful consideration will say that and that even those who do not, and who merely
how
peutic agent should have been so ignored, that by none of our leading surgeons and
physicians
do
we
see
the
influence
of
the
human
336
mind over the human body really seriously dealt with. One may find here and there an honourable exception,
it is
by
his rarity
and by the
obloquy he mcurs.
The power
This power
is
7
where
"
ignored.
but
;
taught the potent powers of mental therapeutics for good. If one turns from the physician's daily life to his library, one still fails to find in any text-book or
seldom spoken about, and still though few are bold enough to deny
it is
modern system
recognised.
and
fully
many
leading works
find this
on medicine, but
called
Therapeutics,
mind
;
suggestion but we want far more Here and there great masters in medicine have admitted the enormous value of mental thera-
than
peutics, but the subject has not been followed up, save
for the sake of filthy lucre
It is the
by quackery.
Students listen with
same
rapt attention to the powers of guaiacol, piperazine, phenocoll and the whole round of well-advertised
often
is
337
powers pretty well balances the whole Pharmacopoeia the mind? In the British Medical Journal we find
"
:
is
so
much
This
influenced by the mind that in each case we have to understand the patient quite as much as the malady.
is
Is he not
Does any practical medical man doubt these powers ? aware of the ingredient " faith," which, if added to his prescriptions, makes them often all-
powerful for good ? Does he not know experimentally the value of strongly asserting that the medicine will
effects is a
powerful means of
power is so well known, why, in the name of common-sense, should it be pooh- Mental 58 poohed and ignored as it is ? It has its laws ^oSdbe"
If,
powers
for
and for
student
evil
if
would
it
him by his lawful teachers, instead of his gleaning them uncertainly from the undoubted successes of the large army of irregulars?
these were indicated to
We
are,
all,
slowly taking place in the minds of medical men, and that our present text-books on
a silent revolution
with merely prescribing endless selections and combinations of nauseous drugs, and dismissdisease, content
ing any mental cure in a single line as unworthy of serious consideration, will soon be replaced by others
1
Number, Autumn
1897.
338
administered, hut
few medical
.
.
men now
of
the cure
for
very
gradually it is beginning to dawn upon us that most nervous diseases at any rate are easily and naturally treated by mental therapeutics, and that the
still persistent efforts to cure neither reliable nor rational.
are
It
ill
becomes, therefore,
the
decry
any form
of
faith
cure,
however
its
process may be understood by him in detail. "We have seen that the powers of the conscious mind over the
now
do,
that
is
organic disturbance somewhere, we are prepared to beand other unorthodox cures, putting into
operation such a powerful agent as the unconscious mind, " the forces of nature," are or, if you prefer the formula,
not necessarily limited
It
is
to so-called
functional diseases at
all.
because, therefore,
Truth must
ed 1D
'
mental therapeutics has ^ een practically for so long the real modus
operandi of the vast
spit7of quacks.
name
touch
army of charlatans, that ^he whole subject has acquired such a bad that most men fear for their reputation if they
it.
of
mental therapeutics
directly with faith -healing, Christian science-healing and hypnotism and indirectly with liquid electricities,
;
billionth
dilutions,
has so
We
mind
feel
quite sure, however, that all such reasons ground when the fact of the unconscious
men
they
and once
of serious study.
long neglect, be made the subject May we add here two brief utterances
from other
lips ?
:
" Dr. Maudsley says Perhaps we do not as physicians consider sufficiently the influence of mental states in
the production of disease, their importance as symptoms or take all the advantages which we take of them in our efforts to cure disease. Quackery seems
;
to
fails to
appreciate or use adequately." Dr. Granville adds: "Except in a loose and vague way the potent influences exercised reflexly by the
with the scope of pathology ". 2 It is to be therefore earnestly hoped that the relations of the mind to the body will soon be- Relations of
come
better understood,
and that we
shall
is
body better
understood -
at
Maudsley, Mind and Body, vol. i., p. Mortimer Granville, Lancet, 1879, vol.
38.
i.,
p. 580.
340
present so greatly lacking) those who can train the coming race of doctors in the therapeutic use of the
mind, in functional and other disorders. Certainly experience increasingly shows that it occupies as clear
and well-defined a place in relation to many diseases as drugs do in others, although the modus operandi may in
both cases be not yet fully understood. It is quite time that a reaction took place against the popular doctrine of the dependence of mind on body,
which
is
fast
tracing of every changing mental state, and even of every morbid impulse or criminal action, to a deranged
liver, or
an ansemic brain.
in
No
pendulum
England
it
remarkable extent displayed in the " mental cures " we have already spoken of), and most bodily disorders will
be attributed to a diseased mind.
The
truth
mean-
while occupies, as ever, the medium position between the two, there being times when the body sways the mind, and other times when the mind sways the body,
the two being, as has been forcibly expressed by Miss Cobbe, something like a pair of coupled dogs; some-
times one and sometimes the other obtaining the victory, and sometimes both pulling together in harmony.
Let us proceed
in what way does the
,
briefly to
consider
how
the
mind
affects the
disease
is
ease,"
and not
341
The cortex, or surface of the a physical change. for good or evil in every factor is a brain, special
disease.
is
there,
unity.
represented Professor
" The hemispheres, as the organ of Laycock says thought and mental action proper, are in unity with all the processes of life whatever, whether
".
Indeed, the
formed
tion
is
in the cortex.
all
tissue nutri-
unconsciously influenced from this great centre, and most physiological processes can be arrested mentally
cell
by
its
;
action.
It controls anabolic
is
and katabolic
action
and there
ful
mind, acting through it, is a great protector against and if disease has obtained a hold, disease of all sorts
;
a cheerful
mind can
often cure
it.
Mental therapeutics
of three
Three ways
ofapplication.
body
in
one
ways:
surroundings (2) by the unconscious mind acted on by the conscious indirectly in rousing faith in persons, remedies, or places, etc. and (3) by the unconscious
mind acted on by the conscious by direct effort in determination to get well, to shake off illness, ignore pain,
etc.
With regard
is
therapeutics
in all organic
useful,
is
a powerful
and inorganic
it
and
allied
neuroses,
efficacy.
is
means
of
permanent
342
Let us consider
How
in
hysteria is pro-
moment
disease
hysteria
is
caused
by mental
action,
duced.
ideas of
Our brain not only acts by the will and by which we are conscious, but is continuously
vibrating with ideas, memories, and trains of thought of which we are unconscious. It is so even with regard
to
common
sensation.
of
tion
on any part
it
that escaped your attention before, but were equally there then. If with a feather I lightly tickle the back of your neck, and at the time you are
sensations in
very earnest conversation, the vibration aroused in the brain sensory centre is unnoticed by
engaged
in
and yet if I call your attention to the part it is noticed at once. By increasing the stimulus I can make the waves of vibration set in action other centres
you
involuntary ones, such as cause a shaking or shuddering or voluntary, such as turning the head of the neck
;
round or moving away. If you are asleep I may tickle your foot, so that you draw the leg away and you wake up. In this case you are probably conscious of moving your leg but the stimulus that made you do it was too slight to reach
;
your consciousness.
We may
thus be conscious of a
transferred vibration leading to action or sensation, and yet be ignorant of the cause that set it going.
Memories, again,
consciously,
will involuntarily,
and
it
may
be un-
may
arouse both feelings and actions. have smelt the strong scent of some flower
One when
343
some critical event took place, a proposal of marriage or some sudden news henceforth, whenever the Effect of
;
touched on, the very scent or vibrations topic of the nerve of smell that represent it may be exactly
is
reproduced. A certain field always recalls a certain song we used to sing as we crossed it on our way to school. Thoughts of old Anglo-Indians set the vibrations of Eastern sights
Observe in
will in
an unusual way.
field
think of a green
or the centre of hearing, and hear the lowing of the cattle or the hum of the insects. This is much
grass
;
there are no distracting sounds, and if you close your eyes ; and still more so if there are some insects But the memories we actually humming in the room.
easier
if
speak of are wholly unconscious ones. Let us now sum up our results, taking a definite case,
say, of a pain in the little finger.
is felt in
This pain
painalways
the
little finger,
we
say,
though we
really
know
tion
is
that the only seat of any sensaIt is there at the central terminain the brain.
origi^of nerve
'
tion of
little
finger that
mind
the vibrations take place, of which the Whenever becomes conscious and calls pain.
these vibrations take place in the nerve centre belongmind always ing to the little finger in the brain, the
344
whatever
if
may
be
is
your house the hall-door bell some one at the hall door if the
in
;
drawing-room
such
there
is
and yet
may
may have
pulled the
down
or I
the
kitchen stairs
or a rat
may
have moved
it
it,
may
bell itself
and made
ring, or a
shock
it, or a strong gust of these causes are so various, wind and yet, although " is some one at in There the kitchen, always say, you, the front door ".
It is so in the body.
1.
The
little
finger
is
pricked
2. The there is pain in the little finger. ulnar nerve itself is pressed on somewhere
.
in its course
there
little
is
pain
off,
cut
and
still if
the nerve
feels the
pressure, the
man
finger as truly
3.
and vividly
it
were
still
actually there.
be a tumour in the brain pressing on the nerve centre in the brain of the ulnar nerve and the most
may
acute pain is felt in the little finger. All these instances are from direct irritation of the
its
course.
But, as
we have
seen,
we may go much
when
rings
;
further.
The
it
hall-door wire
may
pulled,
is
is
the vibration
thus transferred.
So in the
brain.
845
may
set to
work
it if
to think of
start sensations in
sensations.
it
But
my
it is
injured,
though
may
not be, I
5.
may
alone.
But, again, the pain may have been originally caused by a gathering in the little finger, and afterwards the ideal kept up long after the gathering was gone by
centre.
little
6.
memories, conscious or unconscious, of crushed little fingers may also start and keep
fingers;
up
this pain.
Observe, then, the varied causes with the same effect. Only, in conclus'on, we may add that while in health
it is
in the generally easy to discriminate between pain little to the little finger caused by injury finger, and
that set
Nay,
It
it is
up in other ways, in nerve disease it is not. sometimes impossible not only to the sufferer,
who
attends him.
"
said,
We
think as
If
we
feel,
or think
,
,
we
are
feel,
pain,
we a and we feel as we think. Real feelings we think we are ill and if we think we can he caused by ideas. If my ideal centre vibrates ill, we feel ill."
feel
;
with the thought of crossing the channel in rough weather, and pictures the nausea that would then be
felt,
centres of the sensory nerves running from the stomach, and I actually feel sick from communication with a
and, possibly, if of a highly nervous organisation, may actually be sick from transference to a motor centre.
sensory centre
3*6
any part of the body in that part. sensations If we feel long think of a good dinner our mouth waters. shiver whether we only think of cold or actually feel cold.
If
we
think intensely of
enough, we
We
sensation of pain can be produced as really and vividly by thoughts or ideas alone, as light in the eye by striking it. In short, every sensation of the body
ordinarily produced
The
also be
produced
from within.
These
ideal vibraS
cous ciuJor
f a
unconscious,
So
far
we
which we are conscious, so that, although the modes of exciting these motor and sensory centres are abnormal, we know them to be so,
of ideas of
them
to be natural.
Thus, when our teeth are on edge from sounds, we do not go to the dentist if we are sick from ideas, we do not think we are dyspeptic if we hear noises in the
;
not look for them externally if we shiver from thinking of cold, we do not put on more clothing
ear,
we do
is
but this
because
we
is
mental
mind.
It
is quite otherwise where the pain or paralysis is caused by mind action of which we are wholly unconscious, the conscious part of the mind being, at the same time,
347
and morbid
state.
The
no means
of diagnosing that the cause of the disease is mental. Indeed, it is rather hard to expect this,
when
still
tell.
But
it
is
worse when
we
there
is nothing the matter or that it is "only hysterical". Listen for a moment to the usual routine treatment
of a
nervous case
"
:
When
one
of these vie-
I(leal
tims to hypochondria,
called
who
of
are
commonly JjJJSSJ.
recourse to
or
is
lelt -
malades
imaginaires, has
relief
pain
it
is
usually told
fanciful,
carelessly
prescribed.
The
who
is
really
suffering
the pain he has suggested to himself, feels convinced that his malady is not known, and that nothing
can be done
is
for
him.
The
incurable
becomes
intense
skill
who was
his
suffering
affection
suggested by
imagination, often
away
(not
the imagi-
may
disturbproduce various functional and even organic " If a man A wise physician once said to me ances. must be he not ill he is when he is as to ill, ill is so say
:
very
ill
indeed
".
The
Biiiet,
Animal Magnetism
348
and
it
is
high
which they have been so long surrounded, be entirely done away with. These unhappy sufferers have been greatly wronged and often cruelly treated.
In a recent medical work
we
read
"
:
The
sister of
the ward and the house physician settled between them that the case was hysterical, and the girl was malingering" (i.e., shamming) that is, that hysteria means sham;
ming.
when
insanity
was possession by an
spirit.
contempt
is
indeed
felt for
hypochondriac. Picture the misery of a nervous invalid in a hearty English family, say of the bucolic order.
"It
"it
is
all
fancy,"
is
all
the stock phrase before her face; humbug," the one behind her back. This
is
ignorance
is partly due to the fact that the symptoms are generally subjective rather than objective, and that observation is not so much needed as reasoning power.
But
of
is this.
It is
is
partly
and no mind being known or recognised but conscious mind, it follows the patient must be aware of the mind action causing the disease, and is
mental origin
therefore to
some extent
to blame.
The
truth,
which
is,
that
the causative changes take place in the unconscious mind, and that the patient is wholly ignorant of any-
THE UNCONSCIOUS
thug but
suggested.
MINI)
AND DISEASE
r,\-\i
body the
pain or disease
This
is
The
effected
If
Modes
of
the case
in
^JS18
therapeutics,
be cured instantaneously by applying to the irritated ideal centres that keep up the disdebility,
it
and
may
ease good suggestions, consciously or sub-consciously, Their sufficiently powerful to overcome the bad ones.
application by
means
of
hypnotism
is
unnecessary, and
often in the end aggravates the condition which it is meant to relieve for suggestions are thoroughly effec;
tual without
it, if
the respect and trust of his patient. If all this appears as novel as some of the terminology here used,
still still
simply because mental therapeutics the unexplored Africa of medical science, for it
it
is
is is
very dubious orthodoxy to suggest that there can be any means of cure that is not found within the
revered pages of the British Pharmacopoeia.
We
to suggestion regard
that
.
it is
like nitrogen.
the
it
essential
element
in
-ii all
Suggestion andnitrogen.
forms four-fifths of the air no power and we breathe, yet, curious to say, we have We can only take it unconto use it in a pure state.
sciously,
form
of proteid food.
same with
suggestions.
Not one
hysterical sufferer
in a
3.50
and
that
is,
consciously;
they must generally be presented, as we have said, indirectly to the sub-conscious mind by the treatment and
environment
of
the patient.
An
electric
shock often
cures slight hysterical diseases instantaneously, acting, as it does, on the unconscious mind through the conscious.
if we could say to these caused by suggestions from ideal centres, and to cure it, all you have to do is to be-
No
doubt
"
it
would be easier
disease
is
sufferers,
The
you are well ". Still, as it would be impossible for us to take our nitrogen pure from the air, the mind cannot as a rule be thus acted on directly when the
lieve
brain
is
unhealthy.
and vigor-
Bad
present A
suggestionsin-
good suggestions we must also re Such a patient previous bad ones. must therefore be isolated to avoid conversa-
move
tions about,
all
of
and sympathy with the patient's sufferings, which keeps up the action or vibration of the
The range of mental therapeutics is, however, by no means limited to hysterical diseases. The powers of the unconscious mind are such
diseased ideal centres.
that
we can
is
place no limits to
its influence.
When
the
mind
able
i
unsound,
it
is
THE UNCONSCIOUS
MINI)
AND DISEASE
851
therapeutics generally fails; obviously because the psychic element on which it should act is in itself
disorganised.
From what
has been
said,
it
will
be
gathered that in ordinary and some nervous diseases, while mental therapeutics acts largely through the unconscious mind,
it
mental therapeutics,
work has to be done mind being fixed, not on but on the outward means used.
CHAPTEE
XVIII.
I.
and
cures produced by the unconscious action of the mind u P on the body, gathering them
therapeutics.
m0 stly from the experience of others. the Amongst examples given there may. be several that may be questioned, others where the curative agent
The possibly be other than purely psychical. reader will not reject the whole evidence because one
may
or
to
him
to be incredible or
inapplicable but will rather consider, as we did with quack cures, whether, even after all such are deducted,
mental therapeutics.
mentai
classed under the inappropriate and muchabused term of hysteria. commence with
We
ongm.
these inasmuch
it
as
functions stand
before
organs, for
is
mind
We
freely
on the secretions
all
kidneys as in
glands.
(352)
I.
853
We
all
find
mental emotions
the secretions of
Unzer says that many glands pour out their secretions from imagination. To get enough saliva for his experiments, Eberle imagined acid
fruits.
The
hand
the fingers spread, much used lately in the diagnosis of nervous disease, are due to the so-called spontaneous
nerve activity, dependent entirely on mental conditions. Diseases, or, at any rate, minor ailments, as we have
seen in chapter *
habit.
vi.,
may J
.
be the result of
.
We
or incontinence of urine,
etc.
strong mental element. A servant girl mentioned by Bernheim had hysteriHere the unconscious autocal retention of urine.
suggestion was so strong that no suggestion offered consciously or hypnotically could cure it.
the other hand, the hearing of water poured A lady slowly into a basin often relieves retention.
I
On
know almost
suffered
at
gentleman known
to
me
seeing
friend
with
soon experienced a
difficulty in
swallowing, and ultimately died of spasm of the gullet. Dysphagia, so that no food can be taken, spasms of the glottis, so that one cannot breathe, and of the bronchial tubes, phantom tumours exactly simulating real growths, paraplegia, hemiplegia, contraction of
23
354
and
Hack Tuke
healthy boy was lying in his cradle when a cock perched on the side the boy was at first amazed, but
;
afterwards was afraid, as the cock stretched his neck, put his head down and looked closely at the boy he
;
The child gave then flapped his wings and crowed. one sharp cry of pain and was instantly convulsed,
three or four
fits
grew up an
idiot.
is
Emotion
of mental
of paralysis agitans,
ments are calmed. During the Reign of Terror an abbe was seized by the mob. He
is
never paralysed. Dr. Russell Reynolds gives us a case of paralysis which shows how motor and sensory disturbances may
be
first
fluence of ideas.
He was
had lost money, and had been paralysed through grief. She herself supported the whole household by giving
lessons in various parts of the town.
When
fatigued
I.
355
might become paralysed, and that then their situation would become desperate. The idea haunted her.
its influence her limbs grew weak, and she soon her walking power. Dr. Reynolds visited her, prescribed purely mental treatment, and at length convinced her that she was
Under
lost
she at once resumed the practice. This young woman's experience confirms (says Gliddon) Battey's teaching, that in the case of some subable to walk,
jects
when
who have
may
be produced by giving them the idea that they are going to be paralysed (and we may take away by a
contrary suggestion). Professor Biener (Vienna) considers that the "sunder-
"
Doul)1 e consciousness.
is
the
call
what he would
understand by
;
this
"
sundering of consciousness
"
and
the hypnoid state is the revelation by its effects of the " unconscious consciousness," but of powers," not of
the unconscious
mind
while consciousness
is
partly in
abeyance or
its
powers impaired.
:
He
continues
"In
hysteria
we have groups
of for-
356
whole
hysteria is not only a psychosis " or affection of our conscious psychic life (but of our
'
ego
'.
Hence
frr
origin.
g- r
grief or
anger
is
an undoubted
is
clinical fact
often
produced by
LTceT^'
diabetes.
He
is
"
:
says a true
3 pure type of a physical malady of mental origin ". He also investigated the renal secretion in mental
repose and in activity. He found that eleven parts of urine were secreted in repose, compared to thirteen
when
also
The amount
a
of urea
was
each birthday, being quite free between. He died of rapid consumption after the tenth birthday.
*Prof. Biener (Vienna), Neuroligsches Centralblatt. Jan., 1893. 2 British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review, 1877. 3 Sir B. Ward Richardson, Discourses, p. 16.
,
I.
357
I
its
have Been
origin in
prolonged anxiety".
Dr. Murchison says " I have been surprised how often patients with primary cancer of the liver have
:
The
ill health to protracted grief or cases have been far too numerous to be
from mental emotion is recorded by Dr. from anxiety by Dr. Churton. 3 Jaundice Wilks. " The surest way to be attacked with an infectious
Jaundice,
2
' '
disease is to
be afraid of
it,
*-
in
attacked.
sickness
is
same.
>,
4 *
With regard
The
first
symptoms
of
Dr.
Bateman
tells
us of a poor
woman who
got
money
1
Sir
2 8
* "
George Paget, Lectures, p. 165. Dr. Wilks, British Maliml Journal, 2nd July, 1870, p. 4. Dr. Churton, British Medical Journal, 19th Nov., 1870, p. 547. Ed. v. llartinann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. i., p. 181. Dr. Stokes, Lectures on Fever, pp. 6, 7. Dr. Bateman, Practical Symptoms of Cutaneous Diseases, 7th edition,
p. 214.
358
Emotion causes
tention of urine, granular kidney, anasarca, and in various medical papers cases of each of these are recorded.
Dr.
Lys speaks
of both apojrfexy
.
Mental origin
of cases of
apoplexy, atheroma,
dilatation,
during mental anxiety, J f caused by arterial tension, also of cases of atheroma where no cause is
occurring rt
.
many known
Grave's disease.
Also of cardiac dilatation in young people, which may be due to palpitation in the increased vascular
tension from mental causes. 2
He
further says
"In every
development
irritability
". 3
and consists
of depression
with extreme
Special of reversed
In connection with the action of the digestive canal, the following striking instance of the power case
.
.
of the unconscious
mind
that
in influencing the
disease,
is
well to say that is vouched for personally by the writer. every detail Early in 1897 a woman was admitted into a London
it is
hospital with f aecal vomiting. Her abdomen was covered with the scars of previous incisions, made in order to find
The whole of the contents had been carefully examined, but once more a fresh opening was made
out the cause.
i
Ibid
Ibid., p. 905.
I.
359
and the colon specially overhauled. All the viscera were healthy, nevertheless the faecal vomiting was
Most careful experiments conducted by the and house surgeon yielded almost incredible surgeon
genuine.
results.
Two
ounces of castor
oil
fa?cal
Half a pint of water stained with methyl blue introduced into the rectum was vomited in the same time and so on. The cause of this marvellous
reversed peristalsis
was purely mental, and the patient by wholly mental discipline and therapeutics, and was discharged cured. was eventually
relieved
Returning to ordinary diseases. Respecting atheroma, he knew a young man whose pulse
Dr. Stephen Mackenzie gives three striking cases of pernicious ancemia caused by mental shock.
"
:
An
excitement".
Sir B.
W.
Richardson says
''Eruptions
on
the
skm
all
mental
strain.
In
these,
the question of the origin of physical disease from mental influences has been
little
he adds,
a
how
studied."
Sir B.
Ward
360
It
is
it is
de-
plorable
closes
this century
some
change
will be
made in
the attitude
of medical
men
ing question.
"I am
not new, forms of disease, developed through the mind, are much more common than they were." l
arise
from some
is
deceived by
means
of
e.g., Dr. Durand's house surgeon gave 100 in a patients hospital a little coloured water and then told them he had given them a strong emetic by mis-
take.
Deaths caused by
.....
We
:
itself is
Tuke's book
In May, 1873, a stockbroker in Paris fell down in an apoplectic fit, and soon died on hearing that his valet had been found shot through the head. In the Lancet, 18G7, is the case of a woman fortythree years old who died in a fit from finding her
daughter,
accident,
1
whom
Sir B.
I.
361
having nursed her sister during a long illness, until her death, did not then give way to grief, hut appeared perfectly unmoved. A fortnight after she
sister,
in her bed,
mortem cause found, except the depressing influence of 1 pent-up grief through the nervous system.
Dr. Sweetser
frog
fall
us of a lady who, feeling a living into her bosom from the clutches of a bird, was
tells
seized with such profuse haemoptysis that she lived only a few minutes.
Professor Eolleston points out that after defeat an army readily succumbs to dysentery, scurvy, malarial fever
and other
diseases, that
have comparatively
slight effect
when
it is
victorious.
laundress coming home along a lonely road from a solitary walk looked ill and excited she said that a
;
"A
She
died at the supper table. The post-mortem examination showed all the organs healthy except the heart, and the verdict was 'death from syncope due to shock'." 2
"A man
rejected,
came
was
He became
week
after."
who
been robbed, points out that sudden cause death in of robust health in a very may persons
1
W.
B. Carpenter,
edition, p. 326.
362
short time
that the physical phenomena induced by mental cause show a profound perturbation of the nervous system generally of an adynamic character ".
this
He
man had
no preceding or accompanying
Brown Sequard
causes death
gata.
it is
says,
when
by
its
medical student had his eye bandaged and a vein was pretended to be opened in his arm. A stream of
water was then spurted into a bowl, and the student, thinking it was his blood, became pale and fainted.
Another actually died from a similar sham operation. Dr. Lys tells us of a man suffering from angina, who
dropped down dead in a
1
fit
of
anger at
St.
George's
Hospital. I have been told by a naval surgeon from an African squadron that Kroomen, if badly treated or angry, will
threaten to die and will go away and actually expire within thirty hours without any injury or disease. But we must now turn to the other side of the
;
Unconscious
question and
.
come
n
to the consideration of
;
mind and
therapeutics.
mental therapeutics and we may begin by saying a word about this curative agent
.
.
generally before proceeding to give examples. have already pointed out in the preceding chapter
We
how
and why
it
is
p. 905.
I.
.363
medicine, being, however, vigorously and successfully used by every discription of quack respectable and otherwise in every country, as well as by all others
who
cure without the aid of drugs. By this we do not on the one hand imply it is consciously used by the majority of these nor do we
;
it
is
on drugs. But quacks would long since have ceased to exist, and doctors would be deprived of half their cures.
amongst those who rely chiefly for the powers of the unconscious mind
The
oldest
In the
Antiquity of mental
marks
" Their priests evidently appear to have perfectly comprehended the method of exciting that internal sanative instinct in the human organism,
:
which
profound mystery even to the it and which was, therefore, in those remote ages, reprenaturally enough perhaps as an sented immediate gift of the gods. Nowhere was
individual
in general is a
who
excites
of this
life,
as
in
Egypt."
The excavations
at Cavvadias
much
interesting material, showing that the miraculous cures of Epidamus were effected at this ancient Greek
1
8.
364
shrine 500 years before our era, in precisely the same manner, and by suggestion as in our times at Lourdes.
In 1651 we read the following sound and thoughtful remarks: "All the world knows that there is no
virtue in charms, etc., but a strong conceit and opinion alone, as Pomponatius holds, which forceth a motion of
the humours, spirits and blood, which takes away the cause of the malady from the parts affected. The like we may say of the magical effects, superstitions, cures,
etc.,
As by wicked
Wierus),
many men
we
many
Modem
11
are relieved."
Coming down
mental
therapeutics,
to our
of
own
times
we
find a careful
analysis
the cause of
faith-healing
as
follows
"
:
faith-healing
a fact.
The
brain
is
not
simply the organ of the mind, it is also the chief centre, a series of centres, of the nervous system, by which the
whole body
their
several
energised and its component parts with functions are governed and regulated. miracle in healing by faith no whereas it
is
;
if,
it is,
and
are, faith-healing did not, under favourable conditions, occur." 2 Here conscious
such as they
mind alone
It
is recognised the unconscious mind being " a series of centres " endowed with psychical powers
;
!
must not be
1
Burton,
I.
365
mainly performance organ, for a due to a want of power or regularity in action. The vis medicatrix natura is a very potent factor in
amelioration of disease,
fair
if
it
vis
play. J c
An
medicatrix
naturae.
and appeals strongly through the consciousness, to the inner and underlying faculty of vital force {i.e., unconscious mind).
We regret
natura
is
a figment which owes its prevalence to its Latin dress ". 1 This is not so, it owes its vitality to the deep underlying truth it contains, and students
should
know
:
this
all
physicians are profiting every day. " will even go so far as to affirm that a
Again
We
be and provery large proportion of the ailing might were if be sufficiently sound, only they bably would The so. themselves believe to strongly impressed
influence of the mind (here observe in the
'
'
of
1885
is
boldly called
'
of 1888) upon the body has been the stronghold earliest times, and faith is as powerthe from quackery ful
an influence
2
1
for
good or
evil
now
as
it
has ever
been."
British Medical Journal, 9th October, 1897. Lancet, 28th February, 1888.
366
Dr. Carpenter says " That the confident expectation of a c*ure is the most potent means of bringing it about,
doing that which no medical treatment can accomplish,
may
be affirmed as the generalised result of experiences of the most varied kind extending through a long series of
ages
".
There
is
permanent amendment,
others, has
maladies,
shown itself in a great variety of local when the patients have been sufficiently
possessed by the expectation of benefit, and by faith in the efficacy of the means employed.
Observe here
Cause of
faith cures.
it
is
itself
powers
pos-
an(j
f orces
fa^
j^q unconscious
mind
and to cure
"
Those
who undertake
miraculous
cures
do not deny the existence of disease, but assert that it may be cured by supernatural power. They act by
means
of suggestion
disease is
is
is
the
subject
accepts
it.
suggestion,
we should understand
These are
the imagination, and accompanied by real functional Such disturbances may be developed disturbances.
I.
367
spontaneous
(unconscious),
accidental,
deliberate (conscious)
they
may
be cured under
suggestion of equal intensity working in an inverse The moral treatment ought not therefore to direction.
consist in denying the existence of the disease, but in
asserting that
it is
soon be completed."
Turning now
psychism, we
to
will
commence with
natural power, quite apart from any treatment, or any possible intervention of consciousness.
First as to the vis medicatrix naturce : " Foran Against it we read, In the long catalogue h of serious diseases, natural cure is the last healing
power of "nature".
naturce
'
is
an
entire
misnomer, except
it
possessed by the organism to resist gravitation. A 3 belief in it in the concrete has no basis whatever." " are comBut in favour of it Dr. Bruce says a of natural power recovery pelled to acknowledge
:
We
inherent in the body a similar statement has been made by writers on the principle of medicine in all
ages
for
".
"
cannot
Binet,
2 Sir B. * J.
Animal Magnetism (International Science Series), p. 354. 3 Ward Richardson, Asclepiad, 1886, p. 267. Ibid., p. 284. 5 Mitchell Bruce, Practitioner, vol. xxxiv., p. 241. Ibid., p. 248.
368
"
the
theories
'
we
in
W.
et
Holmes.
Dieu le guarit (I dressed the ponsez wound and God healed it) is written by Ambrose Pare on the walls of the Ecole de Medecine at Paris. "Nature
Je
the physician of disease," says Hippocrates. " Eeason dictates that disease is nothing else but nature's enis
all
matter for the health of the patient (Sydenham). is more true of the symptoms than of the disease
"
natural power of the prevention and repair of disorders and disease has as real and as active an
us, as have the ordinary functions 1 themselves." organs The evidence that the brain cortex regulates absorption, secretion, vascular tension and the anabolic
existence within
of the "
may
now be regarded as complete. Sores in many melancholies will not heal. Gland and lung tissue in idiots
and dements are unable
to resist the attacks of the
Consider the following very remarkable facts in proof 68 f ^ e Stance the unconscious mind exerSSSve
powerof
unconscious mind.
and nutrition
of the
In extreme old age the bones are body. But the bones of the wasted, thinned and softened.
1
J. Mitchell Bruce, Practitioner, vol. xxxiv., p. 242. Prof. Clouston, British Medical Journal, 18th
January, 1896.
I.
369
than normal.
A. little
con-
sideration will
to
show that there must be a centre able arrange the manner in which the new bone is de-
posited so as to ensurj the safety of the brain, even to the detriment of less important structures, in a manner
not merely mechanical. " In rickets the organism does not get enough lime the skeleton of its normal salts to build up *
,
.
strength.
It,
however,
tries to
.
make
Self-protec-
it
as tiouofthe
organism.
strong as possible by the formation of bone at the growing lines, along the concavities of curves and at such other parts as transmit a greater proportion of weight.
result of the effort
Most that
is
seen in rickets
is
the
made by
work.
on.
Except
ing the condition of softened bone is enormously and Observe here how effectually efficiently increased.
its
very imit
The bone
1
is
most wanted."
This selective action of the "organism" forms no part of any property of matter, but is essentially a
psychic quality in short, nothing but the action of the unconscious mind.
;
is daily
1
Professor Laycock points oat that "if the attention directed to an opaque cornea during a hypnotic
W. Arlmthnot
Lane, British Medical Journal, 7th Nov., 1896,
p. 1365.
370
trance, a deposit of
is
of the left
is
rarely fatal
is
if
expected.
rigid
Also in peritonitis the walls become rigid to protect what lies beneath. The swarming of leucocytes after bacteria, and the
purposive manner in which they work their way to the seat of war, speak of the intelligent protective mechanism of the body, of which innumerable other
instances might be adduced.
But beyond protective mechanisms, we must give some further testimony as to the power of the mind over
definite disease,
with which
we
diseased concheck," says Professor Clouston, ditions we cannot do better than stimulate the cortex,
"
To
"
"Those predisposed
Protection
sound
an(^ well-working
their great
U
mind.
tlVe
power of
Protection.
fa.ll
When
mind they
I have no doubt
myself this
x
is
the strongest of
I.
37
that preserve health and protect from disease. For the healing, as well as the prevention of disease, a sound cortex and a cheerful and a buoyant mind are
1
all-important."
"
The imagination
is
effective psychi-
cal agencies in
disease."
reflex can only be A full recognition of the cured by mental remedy. value rightly attaching to the mental treatment of
"A
physical ailments will improve the usefulness of the physician and materially assist in the recovery of his
patients.
peutic value of faith and hope, though not in our textbooks, is often enough to turn the scale in favour of
2
recovery." Dr. A. T.
In examining a patient in a modern hospital we rely on observable and s c ence measurable facts, less on the patient's own to a
Myers says
"
statements of what
his theories
on
we
how he came to feel it. In doctoring him much on definite operations and on those few rely action on the body we can prove, little on whose drugs
all
the patient's prayers for recovery, least of on the encouraging words we throw in.
perhaps
Yet cures
have always been effected by other than physical means. Either these can be referred to physiological means
Prof. Clouston, British Medical Journal, 18th Jan., 1896. Editorial, iMncet, 1883, vol. i., p. 19.
372
a psychical basis.
what
two
alter-
natives at present holds the field and we are forced to Selfrecognise in these cures a true psychic action. is all other in formulae suggestion gradually supplanting
psychic therapeutics." And further, "The functional trouble in organic disease of the nervous systems often exceeds the field of the anatomical lesion,
and
".
may
be powerful
Because
Cures by
arenounmgmary
cures,
called b J
(by us the
unconscious mind),
is
;
constantly assumed
to be deplored, and
It is generof
they are
all
fancy.
This
is
much
we would expose
ally
so mischievous an error.
a merely on the state of the dependent mind, more especially the will; and that a change of mental condition has been naturally followed by a
implied
that
these
phenomena
are
functional character,
This
is
and asserts
it
was
all
But he must remember a cure by the imagination no means the same as an imaginary cure.
by
"As
mind
it
is
may
to
Hunter.)
It
would be interesting
I.
873
of an
Psycho-therapeutics is unconsciously made use of by all with reputation in the medical profession. The fee even has a distinct psychic signification, for we are
"
accustomed
obtaining
to value
1
an
it."
We
will reserve further evidence to the next chapter, will also give
where we
some
mental cures.
With regard
we would
ask special attention to the important and weighty extracts from the Lancet and the British Medical Journal, and also to the words of Professor Clouston.
It
seems
It is obviously
falls
two
formulae,
".
"
the
unconscious mind
1
ii.,
p. 657.
CHAPTEK
XIX.
II.
Continuing now our testimonies to the power of mind over disease, Sir Andrew Clark says " It is
:
power of
impossible for us to
_
deal
.
.
knowingly J and
'
and conditions
of
'
ProrTFord,
1 ducing and always in modifying them ". "The reaction from the ancient metaphysical
far."
the switchback
method
of progress
common
to
human
Up
sanguine, cheerful and hopeful expectation is infinitely more useful, and more warrantable on the part of the physician, than a brutal candour, which may cut the
slender thread that holds the vital powers together." " In actual danger of death, the sense of safety often a saving cause." 4
3
is
"After poisoning their patients with drugs through many centuries, the doctors have at last come to know
1
4 Sir
ii., p. 315. Dr. A. Morrison. Practitioner, 1392, p. 25. B. Ward Richardson, AscJepiad, 1890, p. 333.
Ibid., p. 40.
(374)
II.
375
their business better, and now generally stand aside, so as to leave free course to the curative agencies of the
success or failure of a practitioner will often depend as much on experience as a medical psycho2 logist as on skill in simples."
The
prescribed remedies of doubtful efficacy in the various stages of acute disease Value of
till
Dr.
Kush never
deliberate
confidence bordering on certainty of their probable good effects. The success of this measure has
much
oftener answered than disappointed my expectation." " In neglecting the systematic and scientific employment of mental influence in .the course, of disease,
medical practitioners throw aside a weapon for combating it, more powerful than all the drugs in the Pharmacopoeia."
Speaking of medical consultations, Dr. Morrison says " This takes us into the holy of holies in the life of a and his patients, when heart and mind can physician
:
be laid bare to the gaze of a fellow-man, whose discretion can be relied on, and who may from his training
in the
knowledge
of the
human
human
body, be able to relieve or cure his brother of a disturbing factor in this life, beyond the reach of the
of a purely physical kind". 3
p. 439.
ii.,
Prof.
'-Sir Jas.
3
Crichton Browne, British Medical Journal, 1889, vol. Dr. A. Morrison, Practitioner, 1892, p. 27.
p. 400.
376
We now
Sir
Exa
heart
disease, etc.
.
says
:
" In
heart
is rest.
Second in importance is L the element perhaps c of hope. If a patient becomes persuaded that
he
may
lished,
recover, that good compensation may be estabhe becomes more hopeful about himself and his
"A
at the misconduct of her husband, and was in imminent peril of death. At this crisis she lost her reason. The dis-
rapidly developed
from distress
turbing mental factor (of disease) being eliminated, the balance of the labouring circulation quickly righted x itself." This is a very remarkable proof of the mental
factor.
Professor A. Ford says " During the summer of 1891 I met an attendant K. from Wiirtemberg while I was
:
lecturing at Zurich,
who had
two years
there told
after a severe
him
as they were an inheritance from his father and he had never lost them, always feeling a dull pressure on the head. This showed the two years' headache was
physician.
the
II.
377
most temporary headaches before. I then told him definitely that headaches were not an inheritance, and
Since then (four months) the could easily be cured. " This chronic headache has disappeared." case," he
very instructive because it easily physicians, without knowing it, can produce sickness by pessimistic prophecies, by anxious Thus are diseases suggested (unconlooks or words.
continues,
"
seems
to be
shows how
sciously)
l by the physician " " I have committed the same myself," he says,
!
"
female attendant suffered with pains in the stomach. I diagnosed and treated her anxiously for
fault.
For months she kept her bed, and gradually recovered with the stomach very sensitive
gastric
ulcer. for years.
I have not
now
2
and
strict
regimen."
We
think
search their
now
from my own experience curative agent & I refer to the therapeutic value of a strikt (I say clock in preing mantelpiece clock.
.
new
it-
ference to watch, because it has a greater value and I say mantelpiece instead of hall clock for the same
;
reason; and I add striking as being of still greater Sir Dyce Duckworth, without dwelling efficacy.)
1
Prof. A. Ford,
vol. iv., p. 4.
Ibid.
378
on the value
its
of mental therapeutics, has pointed out use by means of the clock, in showing the great effect in cases of persistent vomiting in giving the
minutes by the
thus given
for at the
will be retained,
and
if
it
probably by some inhibitory power over the vomiting centre in the medulla to retain the food.
years ago I tested its value in labour in 200 uncomplicated cases. I often found the uterine contraction
Some
very irregular and slow, but discovered, by impressing the patient with the fact that a contraction would and
must begin every five minutes by the watch and last two minutes, giving three minutes' interval, that, after a
little
assistance at
of
first,
average mental power a contraction compatient mencing exactly when I said the time was up. I
course roughly, that my attendance at the 100 cases tried thus with suggestion was shortened
calculated, of
an average
100
this
left
of
entirely to
calculation
of the value
many
or suggestion is not, for it was clearly evidenced. This induced action by means of the patient's own unconscious
mind must be
carefully distinguished
The one
is,
II.
37<j
a very foundait
health.
Food given by
it
it
agrees, without
is
disagrees.
Sleep regulated by
easily
obtained,
is
that
it
tends to produce habits of the utmost value to the young child. I will give one instance of its power in old age
:
patient about seventy years of age came to me in deep distress about her obstinate constipation, which
was
enema and
for
pill
had
failed,
and
This
last
resource.
had continued
mind and
I relied
and remarkable
intel-
Seeing
this,
cacious aperient. habit over the bowels, and told her she would be cured
if
clock on the mantelpiece each she sought She was at first aided morning. artificially at the exact hour, but after a few mornings
at
9'30
exactly by the
relief
when
of bed, a
natural action
to relieve
lowed
was obtained, only she sometimes wanted them before the hour. This was never alshe was told that to be too soon would prevent
the cure as
much
At the end
of six
daily relieved
without medi-
cine at half-past nine exactly by the power of sub-conscious habit; and at the end of six months she had never
I missed a day. She has now no further trouble. mention this case, for it shows the power of mental
life.
380
Now
Effect
own
conscious
on
unconscious
conscious
mind, and through it on the body, "In 1837, Pastor Chiniquy got
typhoid fever in Canada,
suggestion & _.
.
.
to
the
.
.
unconscious
.,
severe
On told his bishop there was no hope of his recovery. the thirteenth day they said he had only a few minutes He then to live, and his pulse could not be felt.
in
whom
saw his favourite saint, St. Anne, to he cried for cure with every power of his soul, He and he heard her say, You will be cured '.
a
vision
'
Quebec rang with the miracle. He was examined by two Catholic and two Protestant doctors. Dr. Douglas, a Protestant, showed Chiniquy his
recovered, and
recovery was due to his being a man of remarkably strong will, and determination to resist death that the
;
had a real power over the body, and his strong will had conquered. Chiniquy listened but preferred his saint, and had a votive picture painted of her for
will
A priest who saw it then told Chiniquy the cure no was miracle, and that most of the crutches hanging round the church were left by impostors and the rest
50.
;
1858 that picture, representing the saint telling Chiniquy he would be cured, was in the church. In
once more was given up as dying. But this time he did not cry to the saint, but made a determination to
get better and soon felt
life
returning.
He
then saw
II.
381
the saints had no part in his previous cure, and took his 1 picture down and burnt it."
The
above, even
'
if
not accurate in
I
all details,
contains,
Suggested in typhoid
fever.
had some time I am sure, a & great truth. ago a favourite nurse who always had a
superstition she
would
nursing a case of mine, and lay in a county hospital apparently dying in the third week of the disease, in a low typhoid condition, and with every
She contracted
it
mind clear, I appearance of collapse, but with the found her so. and the first her for see in to went time,
She
told
".
me
die,
and
I said,
"
Cer-
She looked up and said, Yes, but I mean it ; tainly " Then of course I always said I would ". And I said, you will". She stared and said, "Don't you mind?"
I said,
die
if
"
"
of
minding
for if you said I saw as live." would probably you wouldn't die you far as I could judge she had reached that point when the throwing of the will into either balance would
she said.
My
saying so
does," I replied,
determine the
said.
issue.
"Do
she
"Yes, I do," I said, "and what's more, unless you do it I won't come and see you again. It is now 1T30, and if now, at this hour, you turn your
to live
and not
have You can to help you. another nurse, and I'll get the doctor to let you have
do
all I
shall
382
little
But
this resolve
you."
I
me
;
hard in the
and, seeing
and believing me, she said in deepest " " I will and from that hour she was a earnestness, and soon I firmly believe changed woman, got well.
that interview saved her
life.
meant
gentleman in Manchester, at
route for
'
F 3er
Mental h UtiCS
fever.
an hotel in 1869, en London, was seized with rheumatic He had fearful pains, high fever,
all
examples.
the
symptoms
of
the disease.
to
London
which he was terribly frightened, but not hurt. He had to walk some distance in the cold, but all symptoms
had gone, and the fever had disappeared. A hopeless epileptic never had another
his
fit
after seeing
own
for May, 1873, there is an appaauthentic story of a case of whoopingrently perfectly cough cured by a good thrashing. " doctor was Dr. Buckley records this case.
In Fraser's Magazine
with severe rheumatism, and tried to extemporise a vapour bath in bed, with an old and only succeeded in scalding tin pipe and a tea-kettle
called to
see
a lady
the patient with the boiling water proceeding from the The patient screamed overful kettle through the pipe.
Doctor, you have scalded me,' and leaped out of bed. But the rheumatism was cured, and did not return."
'
-
As examples
of cures
by faith
in the personal
power
II.
383
man we may
power
of the
touch
Dr. Carpenter to cure sickness. kings l 5 tells us, concerning Charles II.: "Some of
,
Faith in
personal inHuence.
the principal surgeons of the day certified that the cures were so numerous and rapid that they
could not be attributed to any natural cause ". A very curious case of the belief in the person
is
in
Having by faith, on an an official tour (where, of course, asylum being he was the great person, and in the eyes of the poor inat
the person of Dr. Tuke himself, and in connection with the extremely prosaic and apparently organic disease of " " heard of " wart cures and ".
warts
happened to see and he several afflicted with warts, solemnly predicted to the sufferers by what day each wart would have dismates,
appeared.
He
was agreeably surprised by the hearty thanks of his patients, who had been cured so near the " " time predicted that his fame as a wart-curer was
his next round,
firmly established.
the mental power or influence of man. In 1771, a Father Hell, in Vienna, per-
m
"
Jf?^
meric fluid
body
of steel
plates of
supposed magnetic influAnother Viennese, called Mesmer, used these methods with several variations till one day, operating
ence.
were
to
transmit
some
on
young
dis-
the
384
cure by passing his hand continually close to the fluid from patient, and thus conveying the magnetic
his
own body
to her.
the fashionable
cured
bers.
in
left
in
great
numfirmly
He
disciple,
who
magnetic
fluid," a
Mar-
Mesmer by
to a
labouring man, who had now such an that he performed in his turn miracusoul" enlarged lous cures, and, seeing also that Mesmer could transfer
common
"
"
Why not
to a
So he mesmerised a large tree whole tree at once ? be full every leaf of which he declared and believed to benches of rows fluid. Circular curative of magnetic
were placed round it and ropes attached to every part, and as many as 150 or 200 people would sit from mornin many ing till night, holding these ropes and being
This cure spread to England, and in 1789 a Mr. Southenbourg, a painter, and his wife, cured
.
.
magnetic power, by simply touching people, innumerable cases, principally nervous sufferers. At one time a crowd of 3000 people
by their
Hammersmith, although
their
A. B. D. Perkin, a surgeon in Leicester Square, per formed innumerable cures on gout, rheumatism and
II.
385
by two small plates of metal (like Father which he patented, and sold at five guineas the
friend built
him
a large hospital,
and
called
it
the Perkinian Hospital. And this might have flourished to this day, but for Dr. Haygarth of the Bath Hospital, who, suspecting "faith" was the agent, had wooden " " tractors painted like steel, and got just as good results, curing four out of five rheumatic patients at
once.
As
to cures effected
by charms, and
.
faith
in
the
Ferrassi cured in one year fifty supernatural, r cases of ague by a charm, which consisted of
Faith-healing
at Lourdes,
etc
a slip of paper with the word "Febrifuge" written on it, one letter of which was to be cut off with
certain rites each day.
at the
"
f ".
A Spanish lieutenant
recovered
Livy tells us that the temples of the gods of Eome were rich in the number of offerings which the people used to make in return for the cures received from
them;
and Pliny
tells
of
Etruscan
spells
used by
Theophrastus by Cato for the cure of dislocated limbs and by Vario for gout. Our own Druids, using similar methods, were consulted by the Emperor
for sciatica,
!
Aurelius.
joiner of Lavaur, was certified by Dr. and Dr. Sequi, physicians of Lavaur, in Rossignol
M. Macary,
For thirty years, M. Macary, joiner, has been suffering from varicose veins in the legs the veins, which were of the thickness
;
of a finger,
25
386
required to be methodically compressed by bandages and dogskin gaiters ulcerations were frequent in both legs, requiring frequent rest and long treatment.
19th July, 1871, a friend then brought Macary a quarter of a pint of Lourdes water, with part of which
On
he moistened the leg and drank the rest with perfect At midnight he woke, the faith and earnest prayer. In the were morning all was healed. The lumps gone.
certificate
proceeds
have examined him to-day, and the varices have sudleaving no other traces of their presence disappeared denly than a nodosity, sensibly diminished on the lower and upper part of the right leg.
;
We
The
by De
signatures of the two medical men are certified Voisin, the mayor, and M. Cellieres, the sub-
of
Christian
Faith in
Christian
SC1611C6
scientist,
.
spoke
his
varicose
for
worn bandages
he was
She offered to cure them, though a day or two, to his surprise, they In sceptical. and though I have not seen him myself, disappeared
months.
;
my most trusty nurse has, and says he has left off all bandages, and is constantly blessing the Christian
scientists for the cure.
To us knowing
these cases can clearly be accounted for by its action. It is interesting, however, to note in passing what these
mind-healers require their adherents to believe. quote from Mrs. M. B. Eddy's work (2 vols., 8vo)
We
II.
387
"Argue with the patient You have no disease, you you have nothing to fear, and are and well perfectly you will find it soothes the symptoms of any disease If the disease is consumption,
are not in danger
!
begin your argument by showing that inflammations, tubercles, haemorrhages, and decompositions are but
thoughts, beliefs, mental images, before mortal mind, not the immortal mind. Drugs, cataplasm and whisky (!)
are shocking substitutes for the dignity and potency of mind. Any abnormal condition of the bones is the
action of mortal
mind
as direct as insanity.
Bones
call
have no more substance than thoughts, what we matter was primitively error in solution." (! !)
" " truth underlying all this science to find, but careful search may discover it.
The
is
here hard
two being
Remarkable
personally investigated.
from Lourdes, and concerns f^ ase a workman, Louis Bournett, who, for twenty Lourdes Dr. Douzous years, had lost the sight of his right eye.
-
him for years. One day he rubbed the eye with some muddy Lourdes water, and uttered a loud
attended
hazy at first, was soon restored. He met Dr. Douzous, and told him he was cured. " Imcry.
His
sight,
My treatyou who
ment cannot
"
It is not
the Virgin." The doctor shrugged his shoulders, drew a note-book out of his
With one
388
hand he
closed the man's good eye, and held the small " If you can read pencilled scrap before the blind one.
Bournett read aloud, " Bournett has an incurable amaurosis, and it will never be
evidence Dr. Douzous and Dr. Verges " miracle ". of Tarbes deposed this was a bond fide
better".
On this
The
Eye
case
seenfrom
Yorkshire.
November, 1889, stated meeting there was a Mr. George Evison who had had his sight restored after his eyeballs had entirely
that in a faith-healing
perished and left empty sockets. A medical man present confirmed the loss of the eyeballs. I heard of this but
paid no attention to
it
until a
me
to
him.
meet Evison at his house, he fully believing in went and found a modest and retiring young
man
who
He
told
simplicity; the
M.P. vouched
He
said he had had, since a boy, suppurating disease in both eyes, and had been attended by the well-known oculist Taylor, of Nottingham, in vain. After a time,
he says, he lost both eyeballs entirely, and, living with a chemist, he was made a sort of show of hundreds of
;
people putting their fingers into the empty eye-sockets. He felt the cold in these extremely. He then attended
a Salvation
sent,
pre-
and was
eyeballs.
the orbits getting warmer, and new eyes " grew," at which Evison did not seem in the least surprised, but very grateful. He
new
He
soon a pair of
II.
389
time for
many
in the
years, learned to
room when
saw
him.
Amongst
knew
adherent
significant
past
disease, so
whatever had happened these were not and I then arranged with him to go with
in
"
new
me
to consult
Cavendish Square. He agreed, but Mr. Hutchinson shortly after I got a letter from Brighton saying he couldn't come up, and soon after he died of rapid consumption. The case, though probably specific and no doubt unconsciously suggested, is still most remarkable.
The other is the case of blind Martha, who was well known with her white dog and stick in Pad- Eye case
dington.
letters
She had learned reading by raised and had attended the blind schools.
^ITlu
Paddin s ton
-
She could always perceive light, but could distinguish nothing further of this I have sufficient evidence. She
;
had been treated ineffectively at Charing Cross, Middlesex and Moorfields Hospitals, and told there was no
cure for her.
In 1882 she joined the Salvation Army as a soldier, her blindness exciting great compassion but remaining
uncured for seven years. On 25th March, 1889, a Major Pearson, an aged army officer, held on his own
faith-healing" meeting, in the small local barracks in the Portobello Koad deriving, as far as I
account a
"
Martha
390
sight that night, and started off telling the people she should never need her dog and stick again. At the
front,
now
in Australia, also
is
Martha's account
eyes were rubbed violently by Major Pearson for some minutes, and then she looked up, and saw for the first
many
years.
never used her stick or dog again. She got a place as nurse girl, and I called and saw her there. She had to
to the
tell
colours and objects readily, and was learning to read. I took her first to a leading oculist in Queen Anne
Street.
Opinion of oculists on the case.
He
.
bably through cataract in infancy, and the His eyes extensively diseased internally.
theory of the regained sight was that an opaque capsule, traces of which he saw behind the iris, had been
accidentally ruptured by the rubbing, and thus the He ordered her glasses, sight was partially restored.
which greatly improved her vision. Another oculist did not think the " cure" could be A third, effected, but made no other suggestion.
Cavendish Square, said there was no sign
of
so in
any recent
it is
likely
that previously she saw better than she thought she did, and that now she thinks she sees better than she
II.
391
mental) causes.
improvement is really due to nervous For two years after I had the girl
re-
gradually declined,
so
did
dimmer.
I think from such cases as these, and the fact that
the hypnotic state is generally produced through the eyes, that there is a closer connection of the mind with
sight than with the other senses.
At the
whole garrison
F urt h er
63 f
was down with scurvy. The Prince of Orange smuggled into the town three small phials of essence of camphor, and his physician put
mental
the peutics.
three or four drops into a gallon of water, and the recovered and saved the town.
men
As
to this,
curious conjecture as to
we may remark that it is a matter for how far generally the cure we
now
due to psychism.
One
it
test is
open
to
all,
and we
specially
recommend
to
tricities
homceopaths and dispensers of vegetable elecand similar attenuated compounds. Let the
known
and
let it
be
results as
compared with
the same drug administered to the same person in the same disease with all the usual surroundings shortly
after.
Sir
to
392
new
this
thermometer under
Sir
The man,
believing
was the new remedy, soon felt so much better that Humphrey told him to come the next day, and in
well.
making the
sufferers crush a
was an unfailing
specific.
surgeon took into a hospital ward some time ago, a little boy who had kept his bed for five years, having
hurt his spine in a
fall.
He had
;
been
all
the time
feel
when
After careful
to the
and told him to prepare for its the same time he showed him next At day. application a sixpence, and, sympathising with his state, told him
if, notwithstanding, he should have improved enough the next day to walk leaning on and pushing a chair, which would also save
the need of the battery. In two weeks the boy was running races in the park, and his cure was reported in the Lancet,
of
dropsy entirely
young lady who had taken ether three and a half years before, on the inhaler being held three inches
II.
393
away from the face, and retaining a faint odour of ether, went right off, and became unconscious without
any ether being used or the inhaler touching her face. A woman was brought on a couch into a London
two ladies, who said she had Mental cures been suffering from incurable paralysis of in nerve cases. n the spine for two years, and having exhausted all their means in nursing her, they now
hospital by
sought to get her admitted, pending her removal to home for incurables. In two hours I had cured
her by agencies which owed all their virtue to their influence on the mind, and I walked with the woman
half a mile
up and down the waiting-room, and she then returned home in an omnibus, being completely cured. An amusing case is that of a paralysed girl, who, on
learning that she had
cured
wife.
curate,
who used
;
that of a
the country to Paris to who had heard a great deal of the wonderful metropolis,
its
magnificent hospitals, its omnipotent doctors, and their wonderful cures, was awe-struck, and so vividly
impressed with the idea that such surroundings must have a curative influence, that the day after her arrival
she sat up in bed much better. The good doctor just passed round, but had no time to treat her till the third
day
394
bed, walking about the room, quite restored glimpses she had got of his majestic presence.
Hysteria
is
exaggerated emotional displays with fits, or in the accurate but unconscious mimicry of
definite disease.
It will
it
is
long train well-marked nerve symptoms that suggest no disease but the one that is there. In hysteria proper, there is
its
widely different
with
of
no intention
to deceive
and
and
it
must
carefully be disis
which no contempt or
The essential difference which we may here point out definitely, is that in the former the power that perfectly produces the symptoms of the hysterical disease is the unconscious mind, an agent of which the sufferer is necessarily wholly unridicule can be
too severe.
conscious.
In the
is
some
disease
the agent that clumsily feigns the conscious mind, for the action of
latter,
is cognisant and responsible. Cases of hysteria occur usually in an ill-balanced or starved brain so that instead of showing the natural
;
symptoms
it
sets in vibra-
tion centres of
motion and sensation that simulate some special disease, which the patient and doctor often
" suppose to be the real one, thus drawing a red herring across the trail". It often begins in some slight but real disease in a person with an ill-balanced or worn-
out brain
and
up a
II.
395
which appears
Hysteria
to be in
is
is
most
common
the spring, when the nervous system is least well-balanced. It is common in the under- and
in
over-worked,
in
educated
sixteen
in boys
the badly trained and imperfectly from ten to fourteen, in girls from
to
twenty-five,
and
in spinsters
at
any age.
Buzzard
"Intelligence good, apprehension quick, good, judgment weak, no ability of concentration of thought for
memory
Characteristicsof
hysteria.
any length
are
of time,
i
r>
Accuracy and
perseverance
easily excited
deficient.
Emotions too
and incapable
is
of control.
;
The
expression of
emotion
incongruous
tears at
ridiculous subjects and laughter at tragic. There is great desire for the sympathy and attention of others.
Sometimes there
is
many
;
of the feelings,
a proof, not of fraud, but of the ill-balanced working of the judgment and perceptive powers of the brain.
have already given some cases that may come under the head of hysteria, including some of paralysis
We
396
and spinal
Hysterical
paraiysis.
na ^ there
amples.
no
form
by hysteria, from
the loss of power in a single finger or joint to the total paralysis of one side, or of both legs, or of the entire
body.
is
in any part of the spine, but " small " of the about the back. generally In hysterical paralysis, the muscles, as a rule, do not
waste much, and no bed sores ever form. If the limb is it often remains so which it bent, helpless
;
would not
in true paralysis.
This paralysis
special senses.
may also affect any or all of the It may cause such total loss of taste
most nauseous substance can be
eaten without knowledge. It may cause total loss of smell, so that neither garlic, coal gas, asafoetida, nor
It may cause squint of one or both eyes, or colour blindness, or any sort of imIt may cause deafness in every degree. perfect sight.
It
may
the part
All this
cause loss of feeling or touch anywhere, and may be pricked or cut without being felt.
is
within
my
personal knowledge.
Tumours of all sorts are simulated with a fidelity ^at absolutely startling, and skilled docHysterical
tumours.
may mon
pain
org are cons tantly being deceived. They occur in any part of the body, but are most comin the breast and abdomen. In the breast severe
{.
is
complained
of,
may
be
laid
felt,
the
hand be
flat
II.
397
Not
so,
have an unconscious power of either contracting part of a single abdominal muscle so rigidly that it forms
a hard, round, solid swelling, plainly perceptible or they can spasmodically contract the digestive canal at
;
two points so as
distended
to
portion which, being partly movable and easily felt in the abdominal cavity, is exactly like an If the person be thin and the abdominal tumour.
great artery within, the pulsations from the blood-vessel are so perfectly communicated to the false tumour that
it is
believed to be an aneurism.
am
told
by one
of
physicians that over fifty cases have in to his wards of this form of pulsating sent been
our best
known
tumour, known as abdominal aneurism, all of them, previous to admission, having been examined and
be such by medical men, and yet, on further examination, every one of them turned out to be of
certified to
hysterical,
and not
in
local,
origin.
in
many
cases, be
by
when
course,
I remember in hospital patient regains consciousness. case this of sort under my care of one special practice
greatly distended enormous of tumour size. Under chloroa by supposed but on form it at once disappeared, regaining con-
sciousness there
it
was as large
as ever.
The woman
398
was
"
cured," and
it
was no comfort
to
her to
know
that
the swell-
it.
ing was not there all she wished was to be relieved of I therefore put her under chloroform again, and,
while under, tightly bound her round with plaster-ofParis bandages that I allowed to set as hard as stone before she came round. This time, of course, she
could not expand, and the "tumour" was gone. She " " and after had was delighted we removed it keeping the bandage on three weeks, it was taken off, and the
;
woman
left,
most thankful
tressing complaint.
ment
Other simulated
London hospitals our large to f the other day, followed by her mother in an agony of mind, having an open tin of
of
one
of
She had brought this because her daughter was dying from a contraction of the gullet, and she wished to show us
Brand's
in one
in the other.
"
"
little jelly
could be swallowed.
The
was reduced
to a skeleton,
have died from pure hysteria if not relieved. Here I may say that I am often asked if people ever die from a
" Unpurely hysterical affection, and my answer is, After means do". to doubtedly they using appropriate affect the mind indirectly, in about half an hour she
one of the wards eating a large plateful " of boiled mutton, potatoes and turnips, with hospital
was
sitting in
"
to resign
II.
399
was
hysteria,
Hysterical
-
loss of V01ce for when she coughed she made a sound, and the vocal chords were perfect in action. Appropriate
means
sists for
Hysterical vomiting is very common, and often permonths the patient, however, does not lose
;
appetite it may be enormous, or perverted entirely absent, or depraved, all sorts of things being
;
as
would be expected.
The
swallowed.
Symptoms
of
hardenings or softenings of the spinal cord, that could not be known consciously to the patient, and consisting
of tremors, rigidity, spasms, etc., in special parts of the
may
persist for
months
and only
slight
they are hysterical after all. But perhaps we have said enough to
nature of this extraordinary and distressing disease. The first thing obviously in the cure of advanced
disease hysterical J
.
is
the vitiated body and brain with fresh it i flesh and blood and nerve, and then, when
sible,
i
Application
of mental
therapeutics.
we have put the patient into the best possible health, we shall have cured the physical cause
bodily
of the
nerve disorder at any rate. Then, or even simultaneously, the unconscious mind must be made through
consciousness, deliberately, scientifically and systematically to undo the evil it has done, and substitute good
habits of thought and action for bad.
This
is
done
400
mainly by suggestion, but without any of the doubtful and unpleasant accompaniments of hypnotism.
John Hunter
He was
asked
at
to be magnetised,
and being
great toe,
told
he would
so
feel it
on
his
and
frustrated
the
phenomena.
employed
some
withered arm which had been massaged and faradised, with the result of making it more and more rigid. I
neglected it entirely, and fixed the attention on the other parts of the body by vigorous massage, etc., with the result the bad arm left quite alone got perfectly
well.
It is
brain
is
important fully to understand that when the restored to health by good nerve tissue and
it
healthy blood,
produce
to first bring
these ideal centres into a healthy condition, and then make them the means of curing the ideal disease.
requires, and can ultimately only be cured by, mental medicine. When will this be underAnd when will nauseous drugs cease to be stood? ministered to a mind diseased?
Mental disease
Of the usual remedies given, Dr. Eussell Eeynolds " The whole list of anti-hysteric remedies musk> says
:
castor, valerian,
and the
:
like
appear
to
have
this
one
property in
common
II.
401
not one to be
cured by nauseous
'
and
social
management
new
flesh
and blood
dispense
value
is
obvious,
the most powerful agent that for direct action on the nerves.
consider
it is
when we we possess
If
it
must be withdrawn
from
wards,
again.
surroundings during the cure, and afterthese were bad, it must never return to them
Such are a few bare general principles of treatment. The details have to be varied to suit each separate
case.
26
CHAPTEK XX.
THE VALUE OP THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND.
In this concluding chapter we will sum up the general value of the unconscious mind to the organism, and the
importance to science of a recognition of its powers. The value of the unconscious mind (call it Nature,
or Physiology, or Intrinsic Power, or Natural Function) extends, as we have abundantly proved by quotation and example, in all directions, some of which we will
now
consider.
We
scious.
have seen
how
is
opposed
Endeavours
by some
tteuncon-
have quoted language used philosophers. these in the which by meaning of words is so
We
We
have
noticed continual contradiction in the writings even of our most determined opponents, and have pointed out
that
seems impossible, even with the greatest pains, to speak of mental qualities without acknowledging unconscious psychic action. Some, it is true, are such sworn enemies of any mind but conpractically
it
sciousness that they descend to assertions in defiance " these powers must be material or of evidence, such as " purely physiological ; others to abuse, more or less (402)
403
others say they refuse to consider the subject all do their best to ; ignore, explain and away, by one means or another deny the phe-
nomena, or
of
the phenomena, manifested by unconscious psychism be objected to). Consider the deplorable (if "mind"
results of such
their science.
if
what must inevitably ensue, there be indeed so vast a tract of mental powers left
unexplored.
displayed in psychologies in the analysis of various states of consciousness, of all the
is
Enormous ingenuity
intellect
passions and emotions, and of the various powers of the and will, with the result that, while bewildered
with the exhaustive analysis of every possible " state of consciousness," the student feels all the time that he never touches the bottom that he gets no grasp of
;
that questions suggested by his own are for ever arising for which he gets no experience answer that a large part of his own mental life is unis
;
;
touched
of
perplexed and confused by reading " below consciousness," of " subsub-conscious," of " thresholds of consciousness," in books liminal," of
;
that he
is
"
that at the
in so
many words
"
the
unconscious
It is as
if
minutiae of a science without ever understanding groundwork or scope. Indeed the condition
Present
state of
of psychology, as long as
it
refuses to recog-
and all-import-
404.
words
"
as follows
James,
whom we
Psychology is but a string of raw facts, a little a little classificagossip and wrangle about opinions
;
tion
and generalisation on the mere descriptive level a strong prejudice that we have states of mind, and that our brain conditions them but not a single law in the
;
;
sense in which physics shows us laws. At present psychology is in the condition of physics before Galileo
language that we have used or could use is half so strong as this utterance by a leading psychologist of the state of a science that turns its back upon and
No
more
has perplexed many why such an attitude should have been taken and persisted in so long. There is
It
doubtless a great attraction in limiting states of to the illuminated disc of consciousness; little
mind
clear
laws can be laid down, and definitions cut and dry, made within the fixed horizon bounded by consciousness and there is moreover a deceptive appearance of
;
accuracy in recording the results of a skilled interrogation of one's own consciousness, and in refusing all testimonies as to mind that are not arrived at and
cannot be tested by this one process. It has long since been seen, however, that this
2
is
far
W. James,
Psychology, p. 468.
405
far
is
vaiueofthe
US
topi!iio-
sopiiy, etc.
from being
It is
as
accurate and
reliable
as
generally supposed.
is
undoubtedly this clinging to introspection that the cause alike of the crippling of psychology and the denial of the unconscious mind. " Psychology ought to be the most interesting of all
the sciences, and as a matter of fact
so,
it
it undoubtedly is has been discredited though by the impergreatly fection of the method by which it has until very lately
been studied.
That imperfection
is
so
great that
it
would hardly be an exaggeration to assert that nearly all the study and thought expended upon it down to
the beginning of our
own
age, has
been
as
it
fruitless
and as
inasmuch
has at
l
last
made
to
men have
sought
The
fact that
and
psychology
is
recognised,
it
when
its
and
its
laws ascertained,
will do
much
science
attained.
406
and
striven to describe
Value of the
unconscious
tianity
and
" and yet was not consciousness. Deeper down, higher up, far behind, beyond, out of consciousness," are all expressions that have
felt
of a new birth and nature, of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, and even of conscience, are not directly realised
morality judgment that speaks to us from the unknown within, however much its tones and words may be modified by circumstances
and
all
lies in a
The
mind is immense, giving at once the and all, showing where our highest spirit-life and key moral sense dwells, and whence proceeds the voice of " " of God ? We have conscience, and shall we say
the unconscious
to
Jekyiiand Hyde.
well as
shown elsewhere that unconsciousness may wh a t has been called " supra " as " sub," for the unconscious mind is equally the
wg ;q i nc i u d e
home
power
of the lowest
body functions. Surely this is the key to " in us, to the doctrine of the two the " Jekyll and Hyde
natures, to the struggles that
conflict
we
evil within.
suaded when the scope of the psychic in us is fully recognised, it will throw great light on the foundations
of ethics,
and humanity
407
forces that no
now
ventures entirely to
^ hypuo-"
tism etc
' -
Their basis of operations is nothing more or less than the unconscious mind, 1 and whatever marvels lie in
their operations are
action this hidden psychic force in the abeyance of confor if there be one fact above all others, sciousness
;
that
is
it
is
that
state.
consciousness
dormant
in
the
hypnotic
Whether
it
be the production of
a blister from a
postage stamp, or the curing of some functional disease, both are effected by an agency which has power over
Call this a second conbody forces and sensations. sciousness if you will, it is at any rate a consciousness of which in ordinary life we are wholly unconscious,
and
it
is
therefore
it
is
we may
life, it
call it
when
active in
Then
and
animal apologist,
Value of the
Is
he not worried
to death
it
JJSggg,
etc -
And whether
be the almost superhuman cunning of an elephant or and purpose dog, or the marvellous display of passion
1 In one of the most recent works on hypnotism by T. J. Hudson (The Law mind is throughout described as a df Psychic Phenomena), the unconscious " the subjective mind". distinct psychic entity under the name of
408
in a rotifera, or an ant, he
it,
so long as he
is
is
ness
miDcl,
and sees these powers are psychical. The more he studies them the more he revolts against any material
mechanical agency being a
sufficient cause.
the familiar actions of the decapitated frog are seen in a new light, if only he may speak of " an unconscious
Even
mind
"
indeed,
when he
is
lays
It
hold of
this
in peace.
is
answers every
question,
and he sees
how mind
gradually developed,
and with the growth of the complex cortex, capped and crowned, both physically and psychically, with
consciousness and reason
in a modified
in
man
way
in
and moral
allowed to
The
when one
is
talk of unconscious
So that
is of
here, too,
where
relief is so sorely
needed,
it
great value.
of its value to parents
Then, what
Value of the
to parentsT
etc
-
and to
teachers ?
tn ^ s
We m
and
ix.
of the unconscious
mind that
need be
have sought to prove that during said here. the whole period of infancy and childhood, whether we know it or not, the education that is of most
value to us
is
We
that which
is
40.0
be directed to consciousness, through the ignoring or denial of the unconscious, nevertheless it is the latter that is acquiring the most
may
knowledge. If this be the case, it is easy to see, as we have also shown, when our unconscious faculties receive their due recognition how much more can be done
by the deliberate training and educating of this little known, and yet all-powerful, faculty, by means of the
almost endless
suggestion,
etc.
forces
of
environment, of habit, of
Heredity, as we have seen, makes the unconscious mind of the new-born infant anything but
a tabula rasa, imprinting
it
capacities and passions that,unchecked, shall reveal themselves in due time to their owner's astonished consciousness.
But
we have
a greater force
more like
is
Herbert Spencer says " A man is the company he keeps than that from which he
"
;
descended
more powerful than heredity. not linger again over the fascinating light that this truth throws on the value of country life,
of the unconscious, is
We must
of native lore, of
creation, etc., of
companionship with the wonders of which it is the true and only key.
Turn
instance.
It
to its
his
body, for
has often been a mystery how the body thrives so well with so little oversight or
care on the part of
its
~
bodv
-
Value of the
owner.
No machine
410
regulate, control, counteract, help, hinder or arrange for the continual succession of differing events, foods,
surroundings
and
conditions
which
And
yet, in
ever-changing and varying succession of influences, the body holds on its course of growth, health, nutrition and
self-maintenance with the most marvellous constancy. perceive, of course, clearly, that the best of qualities
regulation, control,
and
at the
We
etc., etc.
are
we
all
mental
qualities,
same time we
by no
self-examination can
we
say that
consciously exercise
any
of these
our bodies.
mental powers over the organic processes of One would think, then, that the conclusion
is sufficiently
simple and obvious that they must he used unconsciously in other words, it is, and can be
;
what
may
call
over the various systems of the body, showing itself in the bones, as we have seen, in distributing the available but insufficient
amount
contrac-
Even we can do is
in voluntary (so-called)
to will results.
We
do
Muscles striped and unstriped are ceaselessly acting without the slightest consciousness, in maintaining
411
the balance of the body, the expression of the face, the general attributes corresponding to mental states, the carrying on of digestion and other processes with a purposiveness, and adaptation of
means
to
new ends
and new conditions, ceaselessly arising, that are beyond all material mechanism. Consider, for instance,
the marvellous increase of smooth muscle in the uterus
at term,
and also
;
its
no
less
marvellous subsequent
involution
increase of a
observe, too, the compensating muscular damaged heart until the balance is restored
ceases, as does
and then
it
growth
of
at a fixed period
These
mere properties
matter mind.
they demand,
The
would lead us
of the action of a
system
of elastic tubes,
.In
merely
reproduc-
tjonand
connected with a self-acting force-pump. It is such views as these that degrade physiology and
obscure the marvels of the body. The circulation never flows for two minutes in the same manner. In an
instant, miles of capillaries
up
carefully
regulated from minute to minute in health exactly according to its needs and activities, and when this ever
fails,
we
at once recognise
it
as disease,
and
call
it
congestion and so forth. The very heart-beat itself is never constant, but varies pro rata with the amount of
412
exercise,
of vital
functions, of conditions of
of
temperature,
and even
mental
feelings.
The whole reproductive system is obviously under the sway and guidance of more than blind material In short, when thoroughly analysed, the action forces.
body can be satisfactorily explained, without postulating an unconscious mental element which does, if allowed, satisfactorily
of of the
;
and regulation
no system
explain
all
Then
S S
Value of the
to the conscious mmd.
and
to
clusively to be
Tjy e are gjj
aware
when we
all,
how dependent we
and
qualities, the
are
and the
more
is it
brilliant are
our thoughts
more
continually hear voices within addressing us ; we wish to do a certain thing, and are conscious of being opposed and hindered
We
by some impulses from the unknown or on the other hand we have no wish or desire to do a certain act which nevertheless we feel impelled by some hidden in;
consciously see, hear, taste, touch, but every object so perceived is at once apperceived unconsciously in other words, our whole enjoysmell
;
;
fluence to do.
We
of the light, or
sound message,
derived from the added information respecting it at once given by the unconscious mind. As we have seen,
to
us
by
this
circle is at
once a
413
associations
which
it
;
it
is
not
perception of
a short black
all its
consciously added to the mere perception, that alone is imprinted on the retina a mere footfall causes our
;
hearts to
joyful, all
thrill,
through apperception. Consciously we find ourselves endowed with tact, instinct, sense of the
beautiful in art, in music, etc.
all
;
endowments that we
are grateful for, but use largely unconsciously, and of whose origin or dwelling-place we
use
and
are wholly unconscious. The value of the unconscious not only to conscious-
him
value of the
8
JJSJJ^JJ
hlmselt
-
warns him, it furnishes him with names, facts, and scenes from the
go wrong,
stores of
it
memory.
;
power of the body accomplishing tasks so intricate, that no conscious mind, even if it had the power, has
the capacity for but it also guides behind the scenes the direction of his thoughts, his tastes in short, not
;
only his physical, but largely his psychical life. Listen to Hartmann on the subject. " The unconscious supplies every being in its instinct with what the body needs for self-preservation and for
which
conscious thought does not suffice. The unconscious preserves the species through sexual and
its
maternal
love,
love,
ennobles
it
414
men
in their actions
The unconscious furthers the thought. conscious process of thought by its inspirations in small
conscious
as in great matters, and in mysticism guides mankind to the presentiment of higher, supersensible unities. The unconscious makes men happy through the for
feeling
artistic.
If
we
institute a
comparison
is
between the conscious and unconscious, it there is a sphere which is always reserved
conscious, because
it
obvious
to the un-
conscious.
Secondly,
we
also
man we
certain
power
self to
to accomplish,
that everything which any consciousness has can be executed equally well by
the unconscious.
the unconscious
Theconunconscious
contrasted.
formances of conscious reason is seen in th se fortunate natures that possess everyfiling that others
must acquire by
toil,
who
never have a struggle with conscience, because they always spontaneously act correctly with feeling, and can never comport themselves otherwise than with
tact, learn
415
begin with a happy knack, live in eternal harmony with themselves, without ever reflecting much what they do,
The fairest or ever experiencing difficulty and toil. specimens of these instinctive natures are only seen in women. But what disadvantage lies in this self-surrender to the
unconscious
is,
This
that
;
one never
or
ness in one's pocket that it is left to accident whether the inspiration of the unconscious will come when one
;
wants
it
The
conscious
may
like a fairy,
demoniac about
hard labour
and has always something uncomfortably I may be proud of the work of it.
consciousness, as
;
my own
;
my own
it
as
were,
humility.
can therefore only teach him The unconscious is complete from top to toe,
and must therefore be taken just as it is. The conscious judges, improves itself, and can be changed any moment; the unconscious leaves no room for improvement." 1
But
of unconscious
before introducing our last example of the value mind we must pause a moment here to
prevent a possible misunderstanding. This chapter is not on the value of mind, but of unit is therefore no part of our province to enlarge upon the value of conscious reason,
course, in the
Hartmann, Philosophy of the Unconscious, vol. young this last sentence is incorrect.
ii.,
pp. 39
and
40.
Of.
416
will
The
reader
.
who we are
forgets this
may
show
seeking to
value attaching to mind practically to the unconscious. Such is far from belongs our thought or purpose, and, fairly considered, cannot be laid to, the charge of this chapter.
All philosophers,
all
all
metaphysicians,
all
psychologists,
have sung the praises of their own reason and their own minds. The human mind (consages in
all ages, its
scious bien etendu) needs no poor words of ours to sing powers or its virtues.
pre-eminently a reasonable and a rational being, and by that is meant, not merely that he possesses reason, but that' he is able consciously to direct and
is
Man
control
scious
it,
and hence
will
is
a responsible being.
The
con-
and active powers of intellect are, the arbiters of man's destiny, the source of his indeed, supremacy that part of him surely that is "in the like;
human
much
the unconscious
may
It is only in insanity, in sleep and^in that the unconscious mind rules the man; hypnotism
able servant.
to
of
and
if
in
any part
monograph our language, through merely dwelling upon one side of the question, should seem to
imply otherwise,
let this
417
We
of this at
some length
in the
preceding chapters.
We
thoroughly and unscrupulously the powers of the mind over the body have been exploited,
without perhaps ever knowing
it,
.to
unconscious the
physician,
etc*
by the vast
all
army
of charlatans,
disappeared long
since, and certainly never have been allowed to become a source of revenue to Somerset House, were it not
for these
have
powers by which all cures that are genuine We fear the reundoubtedly been effected.
cognition of this unpalatable fact will hardly at first make physicians, with a care for their own reputation, over anxious to examine powers that have already
been so prostituted. But when they see with increasing clearness, once their minds are directed to it, what a
large and quite indefinable number of their own cures would never have been effected either without its agency
intel-
sometimes unconligent treatment of new diseases mental effect of in as the drugs and fees, and sciously, the surroundings and appearance and language of the
doctor
they
it
find that,
its
whether they
and
its
cannot avoid
use
employ
The
peutics
and wisely.
mind
in thera-
undoubtedly so great that it is quite curious to note that it has not yet become, even in our extended
medical course, a serious branch of study and for this undoubtedly psychology with its artificial barriers is 27
;
418
largely responsible.
when
necessary to enlarge
mind, the powers and limitations of the unconscious, physical and psychical, will be seriously treated both by psychologist, physiologist and students
definitions of
and teachers
of medicine.
We
to
of the
unconscious
Theunconsuious mind
a master-key
m in&
many
problems.
fit
many directions, and seen how it J to many difficulties, and is the kev J A many problems. key may accidentally
in
solves
Such and no less is the unconscious mind to many psychical and physical problems, some, but not all of which we have indicated.
it
fits
them
all it
monograph may be helpful in encouragfurther thought and research on this great subject ing
in spite of its
We hope this
many
Many
Subsequent travellers will and adjust many untenable positions and modify discover the natural laws within which and statements,
unconscious psychic powers have their action and sphere. There are doubtless, too, many verbal and other in-
accuracies that might have been avoided. only trust that all these and the somewhat popular language in which the whole argument is couched, will turn none
aside
We
of the truth
and practical
Our
word
THE END.
LIST OP
SOME OF THE BOOKS QUOTED WHICH ARE HELPFUL IN STUDYING THE SUBJECT OF "THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND".
Abercrombie. "
Allen, G.
"
Intellectual
Power."
Bain, A. "The Senses and the Intellect." "Practical Essays." Bain, A. " The Power of the Mind over the Bain, A. Body."
"Practical Symptoms of Cutaneous Diseases." Bennet. "Mesmeric Mania." Bernheim, H. "Suggestion in Therapeutics." " Binet. "Alterations de la Personalite. Binet. "Animal Magnetism."
BATEMAN, Dr.
" Matter and Lite." Beale, L. Beneke. "Elements of Psychology."
Baldwin, Prof." Handbook of Psychology." Baldwin, Prof. "Mental Development in the Child and Pace." Bascom. " Comparative Psychology." "Brain as an Organ of Mind." Bastian, C.
"Book
Bodne, Bowen, Braid.
Braid.
of Health."
Prof. Prof.
"Brain."Vol.
Brodie, Sir B.
Buechner,
Bdtler, Butler,
S.
S.
Caldekwood,
Carter, Dr.
of
Treatment of Hysteria."
(419)
420
LIST OF BOOKS
QUOTED
Clifford, E. "Seeing and Thinking." Cobbe, F. P. "Darwinism and Other Essays." "Contemporary Review." "The Alternative Study in Psychology." Codtts. " Brain and Intellect."
Creighton.
Eddy, M. Elam, C.
"Psychological Problems."
B. "Christian
Science."
" The Functions of the Brain." Ferrier, D. Forster. " Biblical Psychology." " Foster, Sir M. Physiology.
' '
Gairdner, Prof. "The Natural Physician." " Galton, F. Inquiry into Human Faculty." Glen, J." Mind and Body." Gliddon. "Faith Cures." Gorman. " Christian Psychology." " La Gratiolet. Physiognomie." " Green, E. Memory."
Hamilton, Harrison,
Hartmann, Ed. von. "Philosophy of the Unconscious." Haughton. " The Laws of Natural Force."
Hegel. " Philosophy of Mind." Helmholtz. "Popular Scientific Lectures." " The Science of Education." Herbart, F. Herbert, Prof. "Realistic Assumptions of Modern
Lectures on Scientific Subjects." Herschell, Sir J. " Medical Notes and Reflections." Holland, Sir H. " Holland, Sir H. Mental Physiology."
"
Science Examined."
Holman,
Prof.
Medical Essays." Holmes, 0. W. Holmes, 0. W. "Mechanism in Thought and Morals.' Holmes, 0. W. "Pages from Odd Volumes." Horslet, V." The Brain and Spinal Cord." " The Law of Hudson, T. J. Psychic Phenomena." Huxley, Thos. "Science and Culture."
"
LIST OF
BOOKS QUOTED
Subjects."
421
Illikcworth, I. R. "Personality, Human and Divine.' " Ireland, W. H. Through the Ivory Gate." " Ireland, W. H. The Blot on the Brain." James, \V." Principles of Psychology." " James, W. Textbook of Psychology."
C Life
of.
F. "Psychology."
c.
Home Education." Mason, C. Mason, C. "Parents and Children." a Maudsley, H. "The Physiology of Mind. " The of Mind." H. Pathology Maudsley, " Maudsley, H. Natural Causes and Supernatural Seemings." Mayo, T. J." On Therapeutic Forces." " Medico-Legal Journal" (New York). Vol. i., etc. "Mental Science, Journal of." Vol. i., etc. " The Nervous System and the Mind." Mercter, " Mind." Mill, J as. Analysis of Phenomena and Logic of Human
" Mill, John S. Examination of Sir W. Hamilton's Philosophy." Miller. " Metaphysics." " Mind." Vol and New Series, vol. i., etc.
i.,
etc.,
of the
Body."
422
LIST OF BOOKS
QUOTED
Moore, Geo. "The Power of the Soul." Murray. " Handbook of Psychology."
Newman,
Card.
"Grammar of Assent."
Diseases, Journal
of" (Boston).
Vol. L,
etc.
to Brain."
Nothnagel. "Studies
in Therapeutics."
Paget, Sir George. "Lectures." Paget, Sir James." Studies of Old Cases." " Perez, B. The First Three Years of Childhood." "Philosophic Institute (Victoria), Journal of." Vol.
.
Porter, Noah.
i.,
etc.
' '
The Human
Intellect.
"
Prince, Dr. (Boston)." The Nature of Mind." " Psychical Research Society's Journal." Vol. i. "Psychological Review." Vol. i., etc.
etc.
"Psychological Society of Great Britain, Proceedings of." "Psychological Review, American." Vol. i., etc.
Vol.
i.,
etc.
Radestock,
Reid, Dr. P.
Reid, Dr. T. "On the Intellectual Power." " Reid, G. H. The Present Evolution of Man." " Ribot. English Psychology." " Ribot. Psychology of Attention." Rlbot. "German Psychology."
Ribot.
"Heredity of To-day." " Richardson, Sir B. W. The Asclepiad." " Richardson, Sir B. W. The Study of Disease." " Levana." J. P. Richter, " Animal Romanes, G. Intelligence." " Mental Evolution in Man." Romanes, G. " Examination of Weismannism." Romanes, G.
Rosmini.
" Psychology."
Principle of
Method."
Schelling, G. "Psychology." " How the Simpson, H. Body Affects the Mind."
Physical System."
Spencer, H.
Spencer,
H. "Education."
LIST OF
BOOKS QUOTED
423
" Stanley, H. M. Evolution of Psychological Feeling." " Stevenson, R. L. Across the Plains." "Lectures on Fever." Stokes, Dr.
Stout, G.
Psychology." " Handbook of Psychology." Sully, Jas. " Sully, Jab. The Human Mind." " Sully, Jas. Intuition and Sensation." Sully, Jas. "Pessimism." " Studies of Childhood." Sully, Jas.
P." Analytic
"
Taylor, Isaac. "Home Education." Thomas. " Natural and Spiritual Law."
Thompson, Dr. G. System of Psychology." Tracey, P." Psychology of Childhood." " The Influence of the Mind upon the Body." Tuke, Hack. Hack. "Dictionary of Psychological Medicine." Tuke,
Waldsteln.
Wundt.
Wundt.
"
" Essays."
Physiological Psychology."
INDEX.
ABBREVIATIONS. = C conscious or consciousness. U = unconscious or unconsciousness. M = mind.
Abdomen and U. M., 370. Abdominal tumours and U. M.,
398.
Atheroma, U. M., 358, 359. Atmosphere, mental, 205. Attitudes and U. M., 303.
Babies and U. M., 317. Bacon, Lord, on involuntary muscle
action, 305.
121.
81, 83.
Agent
Bad habits, 144. Ague cured by charms, 385. Allbutt, Dr. C, on granular kidney and Bain, Dr. A., admits U. M.,
356. anxiety, on atheroma and anxiety, 359.
Amoebic intelligence, 11, 13. Anaemia and U. M., 358. Anasarca and U. M., 357. Anger in infancy, 181. and death, 362. Angina and emotion, 359.
44.
on on on on
M. and
brain, 27.
C,
65.
Baker, Sir S., on fever from grief, 356. Baldwin, Prof., on C. in childhood,
178.
Answers
on U. M., 108, 109. 164, 17. Ant, brain instinct Antiquity of cures by suggestion, 363. of mental therapeutics, 363.
of, 17.
358, 360.
Barker, Prof., on M. and life, 10. Barrett. Prof., on animal mimicry, 19, 313. on Jacob's striped cattle, 323. on powers of U. M., '''>. on sleep and U. M., P>1. on spiritual side of U. M. , 92
Apperception, 151-155.
on
312.
stigmata
and
suggestion,
Arcs of nerves
Arguments
Bascom, Prof., asserts U. M., 88. on C, 60. on C. and U. M., 105, 113. Bastian, C, asserts U. M., 48, 49,
87.
^25)
426
Bateman, Dr., on anasarca and
357.
INDEX.
grief,
and
by
Calderwood,
on
C., 60.
Bergson on hypnotic vision, 273. Bernheirn on hysterical retention, 353. Bettman, Dr. S., on U. hearing, 283.
Biener, Prof., on hysteria, 355. Binet on hysteria and fancy, 347. on mental therapeutics, 366. on muscles and U. M., 299. on U. M. and vision, 272, 274. on voluntary and involuntary
Blushing and U. M., 311, 312. Body and U. M., 204, 252-265, 410. Bones and U. M., 368. Bonne, Prof., denies U. M., 72. on value of U. M. in disease.
paralysis and emotion. 306. speech and U. M., 29"J. walking and U. M., 304. Cartesian clocks, the two, 3. Cell action and mind, 7, 30. Cerebellum and (J. M., 300. Character in mind, 7. Charcot on hysterical paralysis, 354.
115.
on on on on on on on on on on on
253.
mind and
poison,
7.
374.
Prof., on memory, 97. Braid on hypnotism, 259, 260. on sensation by ideas, 246, 247,
Charm
Bowen,
248.
in childhood, 169, 171, 172. description of, 29.^ and heredity, 172. in infancy, 169. and mind, 170, 173. Bramwell on U. M. and vision, 275. Breathing consciously, unnatural, 314. and mind action, 314.
happiness 196, 197. imagination 220. mental development 179-183. romance 220. special 176. andU. senses M., 169-186. education 169-236. Children, punishment 227.
in,
Cheerfulness and disease, 371. Child, Prof., on C. and U. M., 108, 108. on sleep and U. M., 164, 165. Childhood, apperception in, 219. brain in, 169.
in,
of,
of,
in,
of,
of,
on mental
therapeutics, 337. Brodie, Sir B., on C. and U. M., 111. on vision, 259. Browne, Sir J. C, on education of the senses, 217. on education of U. M., 192, 206. on mental therapeutics, 375.
Pastor, and mental therapeutics, 380. Cholera and U. M., 357. Christian science, 329, 387. Christianity and U. M., 405.
Chiniquy,
on mind and brain, 27. on mind and matter, 3. Brown-Sequard on death from emotion,
362.
Bruce, Dr. M., and visions, 268. on vis medicatrix natural, 367,
368.
INDEX.
Clifford, Prof.,
427
admits U. M.,
84.
011
5.
relation of iniiid
of,
and matter,
379.
163.
by
383,
384, 392,
by by by by by
393,
Salvation
Army,
388. 391,
392,
suggestion, 400.
367,
not
all,
69.
152,
Daevstn on instinct, 16. Davidson on C, 54. Davy, Sir EL, on cure by thermometer,
392.
intelli-
and and
how produced,
inner, 150.
Day dreams and vision, 271. Death from anger, 362. from depression, 361. from emotion, 361, 362. from fright, 361, 362. from grief, 361. from hysterical spasm, 353. from shock, 308, 360, 361. from U. M., 262, 303, 360, 361,
362, 374. from will power, 362. Decrees of U. 98. 90. 100. Denial of U. M., 72-80. Depression and death. 361. and disease, 361. Dercum, Prof., on sleep, 162. Diabetes and U. M., 356. liscipline and education, 207. Discrimination and C. 67.
,
53-56, 63, 64. Constipation cured by the clock, 379. osumption and U. M., 368. ( (iitex, description of, 30.
it is,
i
what
power over life, 341. Creighton on C. and U. M., 113. on memory, 159. Crystal gazing and U. M., 279. Lures, the agent in all, 334. by charms, 333, 385.
by Christian
science, 386.
by by by
341.
and Christian science, 387. and depression, 361. and emotion, 358. functional and organic, 331. and habit, 353. and hysteria, 316.
428
INDEX.
Evison, G., case of restored eyeballs,
Diseases and imagination, 340, 347, 371. and suggestion, 367. and U. M., 325-351, 353, 354, 367, 370, 374, 387.
Dogs, instinct
in, 21.
388 Eyeballs restored by faith, 388. Eye disease cured at Lourdes, 387. Eyesight restored by faith, 3S9.
Expectation and cure, 375.
Drawbacks of habit, 142, 143. Dreams and U. M. 163. Dropsy cured by fear, 302. Drugs and mental therapeutics,
,
375,
Facial expression and U. M., 259. Faecal vomiting and U. M., 358.
Failure of G. education, 189. Faith cures and medical men, 338.
391.
Drumiuond,
tion, 19.
Prof.,
Drunkenness, phenomena
128.
127,
healing, 330, 375, 385, 388, 389. in England, 332, 333. and mental therapeutics,
364.
Sir D., on clock and vomiting, 377. Dunn, Dr. R., on life and organism, 6.
Duckworth,
habit, 134, 135, 141. B., and Christian science, 329, 387. Education of the C, 188. of the C. M., bints on, 232-236.
Ease and
*
and typhoid
fever, 3S1.
Eddy, M.
Ferrassi
and charm
cures, 385.
Ferrier, Dr.,
C,
Fever from grief, 356. Fistula, formation of, 315. Fits and U. M., 261. Force of habit, 130.
Ford, Prof. A., on headaches and sug-
205. natural, 191. three varieties of, 193. of U. M. bad, 201. of U. M. before birth, 210. of U. M. detailed, 210-236. of U. M., importance of, 187. of U. methods of, 202. of U. M., principles of. 187-209. of U. M., results of, 209.
,
by mental atmosphere,
Free
gestion, 376.
on
illness
prolonged by sugges-
tion, 377.
Formation of habit, 124, 131, 132. Foster, Sir M., on U. M. and body,
204.
on C. sensations, 66.
will, on, 35.
and rheumatic
fever, 328.
Ego and C,
68.
in infancy, 182. paralysis, 354. and and respiration, 314. Environment and education, 211-217. how educates, 217.
it
and circulation, 309. and death, 361, 362. and disease, 358.
effect of,
G alton, F., asserts U. M., 85. on degrees of C. 58. onC. and U. M., 110. (iastric ulcer and suggestion, 377. (erbe, Dr. 11., on cure by insects,
392.
on muscles, 306.
Gestures from U. M., 262, 263, 264. Cowers, Sir W. R. on nerve currents,
,
33.
Granville, Dr. M., on mental therapeutics, 339. Grave's disease and U. M., 358. Green, Dr. E., on memory, 157, 158.
INDEX.
Gregory, Prof., on temperature hypnotism, 315.
Gullet, hysterical spasm
of,
42LI
in
353, 393.
Habits, bad, 114. and C., 139, 140, 141. and disease, 353.
Hearing and U. M., 284-290. Heart disease and depression, 376. failure by mental shock, 308. and U. M., 308-313, 370, 376. Hell, Father, and magnetic cures, 383. Belmholtz asserts U. M., 84.
drawback of, 142, 143. ami case, 134, 133, 141. and education of U. M.,
force of, 130.
Hemispheres, why two, 30. Herbart asserts U. M., 86. on education by example, 228,
222.
229.
5.
of, 133, 136. special, 223. of thought, 12S, 225, 226. and U. ML, 121-145, 208. 295. value of, 134, 140, 141. when to form, 224. and the will, 137, 138. Famioptvsis and U. M., 356. and Hair U. M., 263, 316.
formation of, 124, 131, 132. and instincts, 130. in man, 129. in organic world, 129.
mental, 136. physical basis
and education, 202, 203. and memory, 158, 175. and U. ML, 409. Hering denies U. M. 80.
,
172.
221.
Herschell, Sir J., asserts U. ML, 86. Hill, Dr. A., on heredity and habit, 172. on sensation and C, 238.
Hobbs on
Holman,
Hamilton, Sir W., admits U. M., 45. asserts U. M. 55. on C. ami U. M., 106. on degrees of U. 98, 100. Hand, position of, and U. M., 353. Happiness in childhood, 196, 197. Hartmann, . von, on beheaded frogs,
212. on mind in childhood, 175. Holmes, O. W., asserts U. M., 87. on C. and U. M., 105, 107, 110. on ideas and U. 148. on vis medicatrixML, naturce, 360.
I !
17.
Hope and
on mucous membrane changed 315. to onepithelium, 302. muscles and U. on monogamy, 320. M., 297, on powers of U. M., 118. on purposive movemeuts, on sex and U. ML, 319, 413. on U. M., 413, 411. on U. sensations, 211. on mi dsm, on voluntary and involuntary
82. 38, 39,
>
Hume on muscles and U. M., 303. Hunter, J., on anguish and emotion,
and emotional heart action, 309. on mind and body, 372. on sensation by ideas, 245. Hutchinson, J., on saliva and shock,
318.
359.
76.
vital
10.
muscles, 362.
263.
ay fever and U. M., 314. Headache and U. M., 376. Healing by faith, 330. Hearing in infancy, 179.
260. 330. cures, and organic action, 369. phenomena 257, 258, 259.
of,
and temperature,
315.
430
Hypnotism and trance, 271. and U. hearing, 286. and U. M., 316, 407.
of,
INDEX.
Instinct in fish, 15.
and vision, 271, 272, 273. 393, 394. Hysteria, causes cure 349, 399. and 350. has seat iu the M., 348. how produced, 342. and mental therapeutics, 349. and mind, 394. and nitrogen, 349. not 347, 348. and malingering, 343. and pain, 396. 354, and paralysis, retention of urine, 353. and special senses, 396. and suggestion, 350. and tumours, 396. and M., 258, 355.
of,
formation
of, 14.
and and
Interaction of
340.
M. and body
in disease,
electricity,
its
TJ.
on psychology, 24, 26, 404. on U. sensations, 242. Jaundice and U. M., 316, 318. Jekyll and Hyde and U. M., 406 Jessen on C. and TJ. M., 104.
4.
(J.
Ideal
sensation, 245, 247, 248, 250. Ideas, influence of, in education, 218. produce feelings and acts, 346. and U. M., 146-150. Idiocy from fright, 354. Idol cures, 333. Illustration of vision and U. M., 278,
Kames, Lord, on sleep and TJ. M., 167. Kant admits TJ. M., 84. on ideas and TJ. M., 146. on TJ. M. powers, 84. Kidney, granular, and TJ. M. 356. Kingsley, C, reproduction and TJ. M.,
320, 323. on spiritual side of TJ. Kirchener, F., on C. and TJ. denies TJ. M., 77.
279.
Imaginary cures
peutics, 372.
and mental
on discrimination, 67. on life and organism, 7. Koch's tuberculin and suggestion, 310. theraKroomen and death from wUl power,
362.
M.
93.
M.. 110.
Imagination
in
childhood, 220.
and
of medical men, 372. Indian juggler and U. M. vision, 276. Individual and U. M., 409. Infancy, brain in, 169.
Immunity
and U. M.,clock, 378. M., 73. Ladd, G. T., denies on ideas and U. M. 147. on value of M., 116. Lancet, death from shock, 360. on faith healing, 364, 393 v on mental therapeutics, 365, 371.
TJ.
,
378.
TJ.
Infectious disease and U. M., 357. Inflammation caused by U. M., 257. and TJ. M., 311, 312. Influence of ideas in education, 218. of mind on body, 263. U., 157. Infusorial intelligence, 11. Inner C, 150. Inorganic habit, 129. Insect intelligence, 15. Instinct in birds, 18.
Lane. W. A., on design in rickets, 369. Lange, Dr. K., on apperception, 152-
155.
asserts
TJ.
M.,
55.
INDEX.
Leibnitz assorts U. M.,
431
84
and mind
Lewes, G. H., admits U. M., 47, 48. asserts U. M., 85, 87.
on C, 53. on C. and U. M., 106. on formation of habit, 131. on habit, 295. on muscles and U. M. 297. on psychology, 25. on U. M. hearing, 286. on visual phenomena, 269. Life and education, 208. and mind, 6. Lindsay, Prof., on insect intelligence,
voluntary and involuntary muscles, 298. Medical men and faith cures, 338. and immunity from infection,
339.
on on on on on on on on on on on
21.
powers of U. M., 118, 119. sensation and C, 238. sex and U. M., 319.
speech and U. M., 292. U. M., 43. U. sensations, 244. value of C. 61.
,
15.
372.
Livy and faith cures, 385. Locke on education by habit, 222. Lourdes, cures at, 332, 385. Lowe, Dr., on reproduction and U. M.
321.
Medecine, psychic factor and experiments, 326. switchback, advance of, 326. Medulla, description of, 29.
on death from anger, 362. on dilated heart and U. M., 358. on Grave's disease and U. M.
358.
Dr. S., on pernicious anaemia and U. M. 359. Magnetism, cures by, 384.
Mackenzie,
309.
1-23.
and U. M.
asserts LT. M. 87. on attitudes and U. M., 303. on body and U. M., 252. on C. , 55. on C. and ego, 69.
,
hereditary, 158, 175. physical seat 158. and U. M., 155, 156, 157, 159, 160. wonders 97. Mental atmosphere, 205. development of children, 178184, 185. 183, habits, 136. powers, 36. therapeutics, 337-339, 362, 364, 371, 374, 375. 365, 366, advance antiquity 337. 363. applied in three ways, 341. and clock, 377, 379. and the drugs, 375. of not teaching. 337. and experiments, and faith healing, 326. 364. hysteria, 349. and and imaginary cures, 372. and nervous diseases, 338. and nitrogen, 349. and the physician, 335. and quacks, 327, 338, 339, 363, 365. and typhoid, 380, 381. unconsciously and warts, 383.used, 373. why ignored, 335, 336. Mercier, C, on production of C, 65. on sensory paths, 241.
of, of, in, of,
Memory
evils
148, 149,
432
INDEX.
Murchison, Dr., on liver and mind
fluence, 317.
in-
Mesmer, cures by imagination, 383. Mesmerism, cures by, 383, 384. Metaphysics and U. M., 405. Methods of education of U. M., 202.
Mid-brain, description
Mill, Jas.,
of, 29.
on sensation and C, 238. Mill, Jno. S., partly admits U. M., 80. on sensation and C, 237. Mimicry in animals, 313. and U. M., 263. Mind arresting sensation, 249.
on M.,
41.
and U. M., sex, 294, 307. Muscles, 295. voluntary and involuntary, 298,
299, 300, 302.
360.
below man, and body, 258, 340. their interaction in 340. brain, 170, 173. and action, and and childhood, 174. concept q 52-71 c!'and U., 98-120. cures and 338. organic and 368, 372, 374. has no extension, in animal includes U. M., 252. and man, scope 251. limited to C, and matter, relation physical basis 173, 356. producing protoplasm, and and purposive movement, and 352.
1-23.
disease,
27, 28,
cell
7.
on muscles and U. M., 297. Myers, Dr., asserts U. M., 89. on mental therapeutics, 371. on secondary C, 69.
and organic
action, 370.
of, 1.
Natural
disease,
disease,
Nausea by
4.
Neale,
all
life, 10.
43,
life, 6.
in
of, 24,
40, 41.
of,
of, 2, 3, 4, 5.
174.
fever,
8.
6.
U
Modesty
against mechanical
,
of views C, on on C. and U. M., 105, 111. denies U. M., on on muscles, 295. on powers of sensation, 239. on psychology, 25. on U. M., 296.
C.
66. 60. 74. free will, 35.
Old age, value of clock in, 379. Organic action and Muller's law, 370. and U. M., 369.
disease and mind cures, 338. U. M., 356. and and functional disease, 331.
321.
Ovum, human,
Moral sense
in infancy, 183. Morrison, Dr. A., on heart disease mental distress, 376.
and
on mind in
357.
disease, 374.
grief,
Paget, Sir G., cancer and anxiety, 357. Sir J., haemoptysis of mental origin, 356. on saliva and suggestion, 317. Pain by association, 345. and hysteria, 343. by nerve transference, 344. referred to origin of nerve, 344. Paralysis cured by fear, 392. cured by loss, 393.
INDEX.
Paralysis and emotion, 354. hysterical, 354, 355, 396. and U. M., 306, 393, 396. Pare and vis medicatrix naturce, 368. Parents as iuspirers, 331.
433
andU. M.,408.
Parker, Prof., on instinct and intelligence, 16. Tears' soap and U. vision, 280. Peristalsis reversed by U. M., 359. Perkin, A. B. D., cures by magnetic tractors, 384.
Physical Research Society on temperature and suggestion, 310. Psychism in medicine, 326. Psychology, definition of, 24, 25. present state of, 403, 405. Psychology and U. M., 405. and Pulse mind, 310.
Punishment of children,
227.
on sensation and of hypnotism, 257-259. Philosophy and U. ML, 405. Phthisis and U. M., 315.
101. C, 237.
Phenomena
therapeutics, 327, 338, 339, 363. and their cures, 327. and U. M. 363, 365. Qualities of U. M., 146-168. Quaternions, discovery of, 113. Queries on sleep and U. M., 164, 165.
Radestock,
P.,
Physician
and mental
,
therapeutics,
Raymond, Du
17.
335, 417.
Reflex, acquired, 123, 124, 125, 295. Physiology and U. M. 410. PUls and U. M., 259, 316. action, 295. Plato on education in childhood, 210. psychic nature of, 301. on education by example, 228. natural, 122, 123. not on cures for 35. reflected, 123. sciatica, Pliny Pollock, Dr. J., on education and Relations of mind and matter, 2.
Polygamy and monogamy, 320. Porter, Dr. Noah, on body and U. M.,
on discrimination, 67. on instinct, 20. Power of mind, 36. of U. M., 37, 38, 39, 117,
255.
Religion and science, 236. M., 320, 321, 322, 412. Respiration and emotion, 314. Results of education of U. M. 209. Retention of urine relieved by sound,
Reproduction and U.
118.
353.
hysterical, 353.
of U. M. over body, 204. Preyer on discrimination, 234. on education and heredity, 202. on education by ideas, 219.
on paralysis agitans, 354. Rheumatic fever and fright, 382. andU. M.,382. Rheumatism cured by shock, 382. and U. M. 306. Pre-natal impressions, 322, 323. Prince, Dr., on hay fever and sug- Ribot asserts U. M. 87. on cerebellum and U. M. 300. gestion, 314. Protection by leucocytes, 370. onC. andU. M.,106, 113. in rickets, 359. on ideas and U. M., 150. mechanism in abdomen, on powers of U. M., 38, 39, 42. Protective 370. Richardson, Sir B. W., on diabetes, and 9. 351. mind, 8, Protoplasm
teria, 400.
Psychic nature of reflex action, 301. Psychical Research Society and second
sight, 269.
28
434
INDEX.
Sickness cured by loss of teeth, 316. and U. M., 317. Sight, C. 266. in infancy, 179. and U. M., 266-283. Skin eruption and U. M., 359. Sleep, muscle action in, 303.
Richardson, Sir B. W., on pulse and mind, 310. on skin eruptions and mind,
on vis medicatrix naturae, 367. Rickets and U. M. 369. on mental theraRoberts, Dr. G. peutics used unconsciously, 373. Rolleston, Prof., on disease and de, ,
359.
physical cause 162. and U. M., 161, 163-168. Smell in infancy, 180. and U. M., 290.
of,
on infusoria, 11. on instinct in fish, 15. on instinct in wasps, 17. on mind, 9. Eosmini on C. and U. M. 104. Rousseau on education by habit, 222. Royce, Prof., denies U. M., 75. Rush, Dr., on mental therapeutics, 375.
Spasm of
384.
St.
Saliva and U. M., 353. Salivary secretion and U. M., 317, 318. Salvation Army and faith cures, 388,
389.
Schelliug asserts U. M., 84. on speech and U. M., 291. Schopenhauer on sex and U. M., 319. Sciatica, cure by Etruscan spells, 385. Science and religion, 236. Scope of mind enlarged, 49, 50, 52.
in
man,
24-51.
vision,
Scripture, Prof.,
275.
on U. M. and
faith, 391.
U. M. action, 14. Spiritual side of D. M., 92, 93, 94, 95. Stevenson, R. L., on sleep and U. M.,
166.
on on on on on on on on on on
bad
mind and
ovum,
muscles, 295.
321.
66. Sensation and and feelings, 243. produced by memory, 248. abnormally, 245. by ideas, 245, 247, 248, 250. stopped U., 241. by mind, 249. and U. M., 237-251.
,
sight, 269. Secretion affected by M. , 352. affected by U. M. 257, 321, 353. of milk and U. M., 321. of saliva, 317.
C.,
Stewart, Sir F. G., on heart disease and hope, 376. Stigmata and U. M., 312.
Stivelly, Prof., 270.
on visual phenomena,
Sensory paths, 239, 240. Sex and U. M., 318, 319, 324.
and headache, 376. in hysteria, 350. in 378. in labour, typhoid, 381. asserts U. M., 87. Sully, Prof., on G, on G andU. M., 106. denies M., 74, on feelings and sensations, 243. on ideas and U. M., 150.
56, 60.
TJ.
Stokes, Dr. , on cholera and fear, 357. Stout, G. F., admits U. M., 46. Suggestion, evil of bad, 377.
80.
INDEX.
Sally, Prof., on mental development in children, 184. on muscles and U. M., 302. on physical basis of mind, 83. on vivid vision and time, 283.
435
396, 397.
Summary
361.
on brain paths, 171. Typhoid fever and fear, 381. and U. M., 380, 381.
170.
190.
Sydenham and
368.
action,
Taste in infancy, 180. and U. M., 2S8, 289. Taylor, I., on speech and U. M., 293. on education by ideas, 219. Teachers and U. M., 408. Teeth lost curing sickness, 316. Temperature and U. M., 310. Therapeutic value of the clock, 377. Therapeutics and U. M., 352-401. Thermometer, cure by, 392. Thompson, Dr. G., admits U. M., 80.
influence, 151. memory, 159, 160. mental therapeutics, 373. M., 72-97. sensations, 241. sight, 266.
activity, 356.
on value of U. M., 91. on writing and U M., 302. Thompson, Prof. W. H., on amoebic
89.
of habit, 134, 140, 141. of U. M., 90, 92, 95, 115-120, 402-418. Varicose veins cured by Christian science, 386. cured at Lourdes, 385. Varieties of education, 193. transference of nerve, 289. Vibration, Vision and day dreams, 271. and familiar objects, 281. (U. M.) and shooting, 282.
Value
intelligence, 11. of, 225, 226. U. muscle action, 306. Toothache cured by insects, 292.
275,
Thought, habit
Vis medicatrix natures, 365, 367, 368. denied, 367. Visual phenomena from blows, 268. from drugs, 268.
Tracey on origin of
Transference of vibration, 289. Tuke, H., on apoplexy from shock, 360. asserts IT. M., 86
and hypnotism, 272, 273. Vital action not mechanism, 10. Vivid vision decreases with time, 283.
Voice, loss of, and U. M. 399. Vomiting and the clock, 378. (Isecal) and U. M., 358. and U. M., 360, 399.
,
Waldstein,
113.
Dr.,
on C. and U. M.,
on on on on on on on on on on on on
inflammation and
fear, 311.
M. and phthisis, 315. muscles and U. M., 297. rheumatism from shock, 306.
sensation, 268. sensation by ideas, 246.
U. sensations, 242. value of U. M., 115. Walking and U. M., 304. Walsh, Dr., on death from depression,
361.
asserts U. M., on C, 53. on C. and U. M., 105. Warts and U. M. 383. Wasps, instinct of, 17,
on on on on
Ward, James,
88.
muscles, 298.
486
Water
INDEX.
Will and habit, 137-138.
falling relieving the retention of urine, 353. T. on jaundice and fear, 318. Wheatstone, Sir C, on vision and U. M., 280.
Watson, Sir
362.
Working
84.
White, Dr., admits U. M., 47. Whittaker, Prof., on degrees of C, 59. asserts U. M., 88. Whooping cough cured by beating,
Writing and U. M., 302. Wundt on body and U. M. 255. on C. and U. M., 101, 111. on U. sensations, 244.
382.
Ziehen on M.,
40, 41.
tion, Ethics,
to
James J. Walsh, 31. D., LL.D.: "The influences that go make character may be summed up in the two expressions
' '
. . .
heredity and environment. The bringing out of the physical elements in these two great springs of character is the distinctive The concluding chapters of the merit in Dr. Schofield's book. book show that Dr. Schofield rises above the merely material in "While due liis estimation of the forces that develop character. weight is given to the influence of the physical factors that modify character, the even greater influence of ethical factors is emphaThis is the special merit of the book that, while the moral sized. side of character formation is not minimized, the physical is given its fair share in the process."
. .
.
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