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In this continued discussion of whether man has a soul, the author considers the perfect memory of the subjective mind and differentiates between memory and recollection. He also examines (1) intuitional powers of perception of nature's laws; (2) the seat of the emotions; and (3) the three normal functions of the subjective mind. In exploring the infant's development from savagery to civilization, the author discusses the dangers of subjective control and the risk of total depravity. He touches on telepathy as a purely subjective faculty, and notes the abnormality of psychic manifestations, as ill health is a condition precedent to their production. They grow stronger as the body grows weaker and are strongest in the hour of death. The objective mind perishes with the brain. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
Published: Jan 9, 2012
Keywords: subjective mind; objective mind; intuitional powers; soul; physical health; memory; emotions; infant development; telepathy; psychic manifestations; death
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