"
{163} I Cor. xiii. 8, 13.
{164a} Tom. i. p. 24, 1749.
{164b} Tom. i. p. 40, 1749.
{165} Vol. i. p. 34, 1749.
{166a} Tom. i. p. 36.
{166b} See p. 173.
{166c} Tom. i. p. 33.
{168} The Naturalist's Library, vol. ii. p. 23. Edinburgh, 1843.
{174} Tom. iv. p. 381, 1753.
{176} Tom. iv. p. 383, 1753 (this was the first volume on the lower
animals).
{177a} Tom xiii. p. 1765.
{177b} Sup. tom. v. p. 27, 1778.
{180} Tom. i. p. 28, 1749.
{181a} Unconscious Memory was published December, 1880.
{181b} See Unconscious Memory, chap. vi.
{181c} The Spirit of Nature, p. 39. J. A. Churchill & Co. 1880.
{184} I have put these words into the mouth of my supposed objector, and
shall put others like them, because they are characteristic; but nothing
can become so well known as to escape being an inference.
{189} Erewhon, chap, xxiii.
{198a} It must be remembered that this passage is put as if in the mouth
of an objector.
{198b} Mr. Herbert Spencer denies that there can be memory without a
"tolerably deliberate succession of psychical states." {198c} So that
practically he denies that there can be any such thing as "unconscious
memory." Nevertheless a few pages later on he says that "conscious
memory passes into unconscious or organic memory." {198d} It is plain,
therefore, that he could after all find no expression better suited for
his purpose.
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