Common Sense Applied to Religion; Or, The Bible and the People by Catharine Esther Beecher, is part of the HackerNoon Books Series. You can jump to any chapter in this book . CLASSIFICATION AND DESCRIPTION OF THE MENTAL POWERS. here CHAPTER VIII. CLASSIFICATION AND DESCRIPTION OF THE MENTAL POWERS. We now proceed to the classification and description of the mental powers. Not only all writers on mental science, but the most common writers and speakers, recognize a general division of mental operations, which is expressed by the terms , , and . We , we , and we . Even the young child learns to comprehend these three grand divisions of the mental phenomena. intellect feeling choice think feel choose To this most general division, in this work, are applied the terms , and . These terms are selected because they are the most common ones. the intellectual powers, the susceptibilities the will THE INTELLECTUAL POWERS. Under the general class of intellectual powers are arranged the following specific powers of mind: Sensation, Perception, Conception, Memory, Imagination, Judgment, Abstraction, Attention, and Association. is a state of mind produced by material objects acting on the senses. Sensation Thus, when light, which is considered as one kind of matter, affects the eye, the sensation of is produced. When the perfume of a rose, which is another species of matter, affects the nostrils, the sensation of is produced. When a bell or some musical instrument causes the air to vibrate on the drum of the ear, it causes the sensation of . When any sapid body is applied to the tongue, the sensation of is caused. When the hand, or any part of the body, comes in contact with another body, the sensation of is produced. sight smell sound taste touch Thus it appears that the five senses are the organs of sensation, and that through their instrumentality material things operate upon the mind. is a attended by the , and it is this additional circumstance alone which distinguishes perception from sensation. Perception sensation belief of a cause If a person were asleep, and should suffer from the prick of a pin, or be disturbed by an unpleasant sound, these would be mere sensations, because the mind would not ascribe them to any cause. But if the person should waken, these sensations would immediately become perceptions, because they would be attended by the belief of some cause. is a state of mind similar to perception, and differs from it in being less vivid, and in not being produced through the medium of the senses. Conception When we look at a tree, we have a of this object. But the mind can also have an idea of this tree when removed from the sight, though the idea is not so vivid and distinct, nor have the senses any agency in producing it. The perfume of a rose, also, occasions another sensation; but when the rose is removed, so as not to affect the senses, we can still have a of its perfume. The conception differs from the perception only in being less vivid, and in not being caused by a material object acting on the senses. perception conception is either a conception or a perception, which is attended with a feeling of its resemblance to a past state of mind. It is this feeling of resemblance that is the only circumstance which distinguishes memory from conception. Memory Thus we may conceive of a tree without recognizing it as the particular idea of any tree we may have seen before; but if this is accompanied by a feeling of the resemblance of this idea to the one we always have when we see the tree that shadows the paternal roof, this conception becomes . If we conceive the form of a man without recognizing the resemblance of this idea to the perceptions we have when we see any particular man, this is a simple act of conception; but if we recognize in this object of conception the features of a dear friend, this act then becomes memory. Again, if we conceive of certain events and circumstances attending them without recognizing this combination as ever having existed in past experience, they are mere conceptions; but if we recognize in them the events and circumstances of past experience, conception becomes memory. memory is the power which the mind possesses of arranging our conceptions in new combinations. We can conceive objects as united together of which we never conceived before as thus united. Imagination Thus, when we read the description of some picturesque scene in nature, the mind immediately groups together mountains, trees, brooks, cottages, and glens, forming a new combination of conceptions different from any scene we ever witnessed or conceived before. All the objects thus combined are conceptions; the act of arranging them is an act of the imagination. is the power which the mind possesses of . A is an idea obtained by observing one thing in connection with another. Thus, when we perceive one thing to be than another, one thing to be another, or one thing to to another—in all these cases the mind , or exercises the faculty of judgment. Thus, also, when we compare any action with the rule of duty in order to decide whether it is right or wrong, we exercise the same faculty. This act always is necessarily preceded by the comparison of one thing with another, in order to notice the relations. Judgment noticing relations relation longer on belong notices relations is the power of noticing certain parts or qualities of any object, as distinct from other parts or qualities. Thus, when we notice the length of a bridge without attending to the breadth or color, or when we notice the height of a man without thinking of his character, we exercise the faculty of abstraction. Abstraction is the direction of the mind to any particular object or quality, from the interest which is felt in it, or in something connected with it. The degree of attention is always proportioned to the degree of interest felt in the object. Attention is the power possessed by the mind of recalling ideas in the connections and relations in which they have existed in past experience. For example, when any two objects, such as a house and a tree, have often been observed together, the idea of one will ordinarily be attended by that of the other. If two events have often been united together in regard to the of their occurrence, such, for example, as thunder and lightning, the idea of one will usually be attended by the other. Association time In this work, the aim is to introduce no more of mental analysis than is needed for its main object. What is here introduced is not claimed as a complete presentation of all the mental phenomena. About HackerNoon Book Series: We bring you the most important technical, scientific, and insightful public domain books. This book is part of the public domain. Catharine Esther Beecher (2017). Common Sense Applied to Religion; Or, The Bible and the People. Urbana, Illinois: Project Gutenberg. 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