Page images
PDF
EPUB

Sec. 1. In what manner cerebral perception furnishes the ma-
terials of all our instinctive, and intellectual operations,
Sec. 2. How the emotions of sensibility become motives of all
our actions,

118

121

Sec. 3. In what manner observation, offspring of cerebral per-
ception developes our intellectual faculties; and what are
those faculties,

123

Sec. 4. How the will and the freedom of the will, connect them-
selves with perception,

125

Sec. 5. How intellectual perceptions associate themselves with
instinctive emotions; and what constitutes the passions,
Sec. 6. Cause of error of the psychologists on the principle of
action in man,

128

131

Ch. 7. How THE INSTINCTIVE AND INTELLECTUAL PHENOMENA, ARE CON-
NECTED WITH IRRITATION,

133

On volition and the will p 125 and

145

On nervous excitation considered in itself,
Ch. 8. ON THE PART WHICH EXCITATION ACTS IN THE PRODUCTION OF
DISEASE,

147

149

Sec. 1. How the defect of excitation produces abirritative dis

eases,

150

Sec. 2. How the defect of excitation produces irritative dis

eases,

154

Sec. 3. How excess of irritation produces diseases of irritation,
and what those diseases are,

158

Sec. 4. Of the changes that take place in the organs in conse-
quence of irritation,

162

ON IRRITATION AND INSANITY: PART THE SECOND,

181

On Insanity considered in reference to the principles of physio-
logical medicine, and the phenomena of irritation,

[blocks in formation]

Acute furious mania p 190. Acute mania not furious 192.
Chronic mania general and partial, or monomania,

193

1. Instinctive monomanias, founded on the perversion of instinct.
and the wants termed physical; either complicated with de-
lirium or not,

194

A. Perversion of the want or instinct of self-preservation, or
suicide,

194

B. Perversion of the instinctive want of muscular exercise, or
rest,

195

C. Perversion of the instinctive want of associating with other
men,

195

D. Perversion of the instinctive want of nutriment,

197

E. Perversion of the instinctive desire of generation,

197

2. Intellectual monomaniacs; or persons that are such from the
perversion of moral wants, with the predominance of one
idea, or one series of ideas, acquired,

[blocks in formation]

Ch. 4. PROGRESS, DURATION, COMPLICATION, TERMINATION OF INSANITY, 206

Dementia, and general paralysis,

208

Ch. 5. NECROSCOPY OF INSANE PEOPLE,

213

Ch. 6. ON THEORIES OF INSANITY, ANCIENT AND MODERN, UNTIL THE IN-
TRODUCTION OP PHYSIOLOGICAL MEDICINE,

216

Dr Gall's opinions examined,

226 to 232

Ch. 8. PROGNOSTIC OF INSANITY,

Ch. 7. THEORY OF INSANITY ACCORDING TO THE PHYSIOLOGICAL DOC-
TRINE,

Dr. Gall's opinions on monomania &c. examined,

Ch. 9. ON THE TREATMENT OF INSANITY,

SUPPLEMENT: examination of the metaphysics of M. Cousin,

233

247 to 254

262

273

280

FINIS. End of M. Broussais' work,

292

[blocks in formation]

A view of the metaphysical and physiological arguments in favor of

[blocks in formation]

ERRATA.

Page 29 for Stahl formerly read formally. 37 for effections read affections.

38 for attributing to read adopting.

39 line 9 from the top for which read in which.
44 line 9 from the top for nothing read any thing.

51 middle of the page for principle read principal.

72 line last, dele if.

95 line 13 from the top, for the senses read your senses ?
117 for ch. VII read ch. VI.

197 for B read D.

213 line 16 from the top after symptoms add of.

216 line 16 from the bottom for exercise read exorcise.

230 line 11 from the top for than read that.

250 note for organiologists read organologists.

271 for 80 of Fah read 90.

272 line 11 from the top for vegetable, fecula, read vegetable feculă.

:

« PreviousContinue »