Our habitual or empirical consciousness may consist of a mere selection from a multitude of thoughts and sensations, of which some at least are equally conscious with those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self, except... The Newer Spiritualism - Page 11by Frank Podmore - 1911 - 320 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Livingston Nevius - China - 1894 - 540 pages
...those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self except that, among my potential selves, this one has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. I hold that it has established no further claim, and that it is perfectly possible that other thoughts,... | |
| Frank Podmore - Parapsychology - 1897 - 480 pages
...habitually live is not the only consciousness in connection with our organism. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self except that, among many...itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life." There is in each of us an abiding psychical entity far more extensive than he knows, — an individuality... | |
| Albert B. Olston - Christian Science - 1902 - 440 pages
...those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self, except that among my potential selves this one has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. I hold that it has established no further claim, and that it is perfectly possible that other thoughts,... | |
| Frank Sargent Hoffman - Hypnotism - 1903 - 338 pages
...live is not the only consciousness in connection with our organism." "I accord," he says, "no primacy to my ordinary waking self except that among many...itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life." This subliminal self, in his opinion, can never express itself completely through any corporeal manifestation.... | |
| Edward T. Bennett - Parapsychology - 1903 - 68 pages
...may consist of a mere selection from a multitude of thoughts and sensations. Our ordinary waking self has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. But other thoughts, feelings, and memories, either isolated or in continuous connection, may form a... | |
| Joseph Maxwell - Parapsychology - 1905 - 486 pages
...those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self, except that among my potential selves this one has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. I hold that it has established no further claim, and that it is perfectly possible that other thoughts,... | |
| Joseph Maxwell - Parapsychology - 1905 - 494 pages
...those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self, except that among my potential selves this one has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. I hold that it has established no further claim, and that it is perfectly possible that other thoughts,... | |
| Frank Podmore - Parapsychology - 1908 - 410 pages
...comparatively unimportant " I accord no primacy," he writes, "to my ordinary waking self, except that among my potential selves this one has shown itself the fittest...darkness, or has not yet called into conscious activity. " Each of us," he continues, " is in reality an abiding psychical entity far more extensive than he... | |
| Hereward Carrington - Death - 1912 - 576 pages
...those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self, except that among my potential selves this one has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. I hold that it has established no further claim ; and that it is perfectly possible that other thoughts,... | |
| Janet Oppenheim - Science - 1985 - 536 pages
...those that we empirically know. I accord no primacy to my ordinary waking self, except that among my potential selves this one has shown itself the fittest to meet the needs of common life. I hold that it has established no further claim, and that it is perfectly possible that other thoughts,... | |
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