. Alienist and neurologist. . PriKc Iwo lluTidrcd Thirty-Six. THE JAMES-LANGE THEORY OF THE EMOTIONS. ITSRELATION TO PSYCHIATRY. By HOWARD D. MdNTYRE, Clinical Pathologist to the Longview Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio; Assistantin Physiology, University of Cincinnati. ERHAPS no question in the sciences of Physiology and Psy-chology has aroused so much discussion on the part of investi-gators as has that of the emotions, their origin, significance andphysiological manifestation. The philosophers and psychologistswere the first investigators in the field, and at the methods ofthese researchers were


. Alienist and neurologist. . PriKc Iwo lluTidrcd Thirty-Six. THE JAMES-LANGE THEORY OF THE EMOTIONS. ITSRELATION TO PSYCHIATRY. By HOWARD D. MdNTYRE, Clinical Pathologist to the Longview Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio; Assistantin Physiology, University of Cincinnati. ERHAPS no question in the sciences of Physiology and Psy-chology has aroused so much discussion on the part of investi-gators as has that of the emotions, their origin, significance andphysiological manifestation. The philosophers and psychologistswere the first investigators in the field, and at the methods ofthese researchers were, for a long time, purely speculative, littlewas accomplished other than the mere cataloging of the variousoutward changes to be observed in the organism under emotionalstrain, along with some attempts at classification of the differentkinds of emotion. From the time of the ancients, to Darwin (1 ), Mantegazzi(2), and others, speculation was much the same. Darwindid by far the best work of his time on the description of theobjective signs in animals under e


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectpsychology, bookyear1