Common Sense and Its CultivationPsychology Press, 1926 - 289 Seiten First published in 1999. This is Volume III of twenty-one of a series on Cognitive Psychology. Written in 1926, this book looks at what common sense is, how we might arrive at an idea or discovery by inspiration, or at a judgment or decision by intuition; when in either case we have no knowledge as to how the result is suddenly attained. |
Inhalt
IISUBCONSCIOUS JUDGMENT | 21 |
VIIFORMAL REASONING AND SUBCONSCIOUS | 102 |
VIIIEXPERTS AS DIRECTORS OF COMMERCIAL | 133 |
IXEXPERTS AS BUSINESS MEN | 145 |
ATION | 152 |
XIIOPPOSITION TO NEW IDEAS | 172 |
XIIITHE CRITICAL FACULTY OF THE PRACTICAL | 194 |
XIVON EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS | 204 |
XVTHE MENTAL ABILITY OF THE QUAKERS | 238 |
XVITHE TEACHING OF MORALITY | 268 |
285 | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abnormal calculating power anna coin appears argument arithmetic arrived asked bad education Baniya belief Bidder business ability business instinct calculating ability capacity chapter character Colburn commercial common sense confidence trick conscious mind conscious reasoning consciousness dealing decision described discovered discovery dupe evidence example expert explanation fact factors faculty figures firm forgetting forgotten formal reasoning Friends George Parker Bidder give habit Hence idea impressions India Indian influence instance interest intuitive power Jedediah Buxton Joseph Jackson Lister judge jury knowledge known lack large number learning London Lord Kelvin Mahomedans Marwaris matter memory ment mental merchant method moral prepossessions multiplied nature occasion once opinion practice probably produced Quakers question quoted railway recognised religious remarkable replied result Richard Tangye says scientific seems senior clerks showed subconscious judgment subconscious mind success suggested swindler told W. E. Forster Zerah Colburn