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INTROSPECTION (from Lat. introspicere...

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 717 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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INTROSPECTION (from
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Lat. introspicere, to look within)
  , in psychology, the
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process of examining the operations of one's own mind with a view to discovering the
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laws which govern psychic processes . The introspective method has been adopted by psychologists from the earliest times, more especially by Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and
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English psychologists of the earlier school . It possesses the
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advantage that the individual has fuller knowledge of his own mind than that of any other person, and is able therefore to observe its
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action more accurately under systematic tests . On the other hand it has the obvious weakness that in the
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total content of the psychic state under examination there must be taken into account the consciousness that the test is in progress . This consciousness necessarily arouses the attention, and may divert it to such an extent that the test as such has little value . Such psychological problems as those connected with the emotions and their
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physical concomitants are especially defective in the introspective method; the fact that one is looking forward to a shock prepared in advance constitutes at once an abnormal psychic state, just as a
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nervous person's heart will beat faster when awaiting a doctor's diagnosis . The purely introspective method has of course always been supplemented by the comparison of similar psychic states in other persons, and in
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modern psycho-physiology it is of comparatively minor importance . See PSYCHOLOGY, ATTENTION, &c.; a clear statement will be found in G . F . Stout's
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Manual of Psychology (1898), i . 14 .

End of Article: INTROSPECTION (from Lat. introspicere, to look within)
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