Historian of psychology Mark Altschule observes that, " It is difficult or perhaps impossible to find a nineteenth-century psychologist or psychiatrist who did not recognize unconscious cerebration as not only real but of the highest importance ."
12.
Nor had any American science-fiction epic successfully integrated so much mayhem with so much cerebration ( CQ )-- with oft-poetic reflections on the meaning of life, the duties of warriors and the exhilaration of galactic political rebellion.
13.
This aggressive, sexual, alienlike figure of her own imagination echoes throughout the book, which is gorgeously suffused not only with metaphor but with metaphors for the making of metaphor, the action of thought and the self-hypnosis of cerebration.
14.
The manifold cerebration, ceremonies and activities were held under the name " Uniting Hearts, Uniting Wills, the Centenary of Samakkhi Witthayakhom School 2008 " ( RTGS : " Roi chai roi maitri nueng roi pi samakkhi witthayakhom phoso song phan ha roi ha sip et " ).
15.
The best angles in this picture ( the hands of the Chinaman, etc ) seem to have been swiped by unconscious cerebration from Utpatel's drawing for'The Star-Spawn'by Derleth and Schorer . " On September 9, 1937, he wrote to R . H . Barlow : " Query : why does Brundage try to make all her women look like wet-nurses?
16.
And life _ that multifarious, multidimensional, collisional freight train of thoughts and sensations you experience away from your desk, when you walk down 56th Street or drive to Memphis _ can be quite bracing ( if you can just stand it ) as well as useful for filling up the " well of unconscious cerebration " that Henry James thought contributed to the writer's ability actually to connect bliss and bale.
17.
Also, in his " Cerebral Physiology and Materialism " ( 1842 ) the published text of his Presidential Address to the British Phrenological Association Engledue introduced the concept of " cerebration ", a term that was later revived, in 1855, by William Benjamin Carpenter's " unconscious cerebration ", a term which Carpenter offered as a more refined development of his earlier concept, the " Braid's " Hypnotism " in 1852;
18.
Also, in his " Cerebral Physiology and Materialism " ( 1842 ) the published text of his Presidential Address to the British Phrenological Association Engledue introduced the concept of " cerebration ", a term that was later revived, in 1855, by William Benjamin Carpenter's " unconscious cerebration ", a term which Carpenter offered as a more refined development of his earlier concept, the " Braid's " Hypnotism " in 1852;