If we take an unprejudiced view of the processes of consciousness, free from all the so-called association rules and theories, we see at once that an idea is no more an even relatively constant thing than is a feeling or emotion or volitional process. There exist only changing and transient ideational processes ; there are no permanent ideas that return again and disappear again.


p. 122 - An Introduction to Psychology, 1912


If we take an unprejudiced view of the processes of consciousness, free from all the so-called association rules and theories, we see at once that an ...

If we take an unprejudiced view of the processes of consciousness, free from all the so-called association rules and theories, we see at once that an ...

If we take an unprejudiced view of the processes of consciousness, free from all the so-called association rules and theories, we see at once that an ...

If we take an unprejudiced view of the processes of consciousness, free from all the so-called association rules and theories, we see at once that an ...