. . . . . . . . . "Ressources Internet" . . . . . "The source and aim of human progress"@en . "The source and aim of human progress" . . . . "\"About twenty-five years ago I published in my Psychology of Suggestion a series of experiments on Normal and Abnormal Suggestibility, carried on at various laboratories including my own laboratory. I developed the psycho-physiological theory of the subconscious, traced the causation and nature of subconscious activities, and worked out the laws of normal and abnormal suggestibility. The following pertains to our present subject: The nervous centers of man's nervous system, if classified as to function, may be divided into inferior and superior. The inferior centers are characterized by reflex and automatic activities. A stimulus excites the peripheral nerve-endings of some sense-organ. At once a nerve-current is set up in the afferent nerves. The current in its turn stimulates a plexus of central ganglia, the nerve energy of which is set free, and is propagated along the efferent nerves towards muscles and glands,--secretions, muscular contractions and relaxations are the result; biologically regarded, various reactions and adjustments follow\"--Book. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved)."@en . . "\"About twenty-five years ago I published in my Psychology of Suggestion a series of experiments on Normal and Abnormal Suggestibility, carried on at various laboratories including my own laboratory. I developed the psycho-physiological theory of the subconscious, traced the causation and nature of subconscious activities, and worked out the laws of normal and abnormal suggestibility. The following pertains to our present subject: The nervous centers of man's nervous system, if classified as to function, may be divided into inferior and superior. The inferior centers are characterized by reflex and automatic activities. A stimulus excites the peripheral nerve-endings of some sense-organ. At once a nerve-current is set up in the afferent nerves. The current in its turn stimulates a plexus of central ganglia, the nerve energy of which is set free, and is propagated along the efferent nerves towards muscles and glands,--secretions, muscular contractions and relaxations are the result; biologically regarded, various reactions and adjustments follow\"--Book. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved)." . "Source and aim of human progress"@en . . . "Psychologie sociale." . . "Progrès." . . "Progress." . . . . "Social psychology." . . "Psychology, Social." . .