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Citations:cœnæsthetic

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English citations of cœnæsthetic

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1851 1894 1900 1904
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1851 C.E., Animal Magnetism, in The North British Review, W.P. Kennedy; Volume XV, American Edition, Volume X, Article VI, page #78:
    He refers the cœnæsthetic effects under discussion to the agency of a new imponderable or dynamide.
  • 1894 C.E., H. C. Warren, Emotion, in The Psychological Review; Volume I, page #547:
    The theory of the mechanism of emotion which rests on the identification of kinæsthetic and cœnæsthetic sensations and centres, and which assumes a cortical vaso‐motor centre in the region of the sensorial centres as the seat of the emotional process, can only be mentioned.
  • 1900 C.E., John Turner, A Theory concerning the Physical Conditions of the Nervous System which are Necessary for the Production of States of Melancholia, Mania, etc., in The Journal of Mental Science, Longman, Green, Longman & Roberts; Volume XLVI, page #508:
    In all melancholic states the relation between impressions from the special senses and from the cœnæsthetic channels is altered, so that we get a rise of subject consciousness and a fall of object-consciousness; melancholies all being morbidly introspective and self-absorbed. This condition is brought about by the undue prominence given to impressions from the cœnæsthetic sources, owing to the other channel being, as I imagine, interfered with or blocked.
  • 1904 C.E., Boris Sidis and Simon Philip Goodhart, Multiple Personality, D. Appleton and Company; Chapter XVI, page #341:
    THERE are some current theories which attempt to refer the amnesia of subconscious states or of the so‐called “ Dämmerzustände ” found in epilepsy to changes in visceral cœnæsthetic sensibility.