First Published in 1999. This is Volume VIII of ten in the
Physiological Psychology series. Written in 1930, is a look at the
works of Frederic Paulhan, a leading French contemporary
psychologist whose main theories are that feeling and emotion are
due to an arrest of tendencies and that all forms of feeing,
including both pleasure and pain, are implicit in the very broad
bio-physical conception of man as an un-adapted animal which also
underlies his theory of consciousness and personality.
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