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ARTICLE |

The Autonomic Functions and the Personality.

JAMA. 1919;72(11):819. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610110051026.
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ABSTRACT

The author states that this is an endeavor to substitute a "dynamic mechanism that can be visualized by the student" for the libido of Freud and Jung. One is tempted to believe that it is an attempt by a freudian to shield the libido, in which he believes, from the obloquy of numerous critics and skeptics, by putting on it an organic dress as yet sufficiently new and vague to be quite inoffensive. Whether or not he succeeds is for the reader to decide. As the title indicates, the monograph is an essay on the relations of the autonomic nervous system to psychic processes and personality. But it is more—or less. The thesis sustained is that "the autonomic apparatus dominates the organism and that the affections have their origin in the peripheral functions of this apparatus." The argument is divided into three steps: Part I tries to show that since

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