Apprehension

From LoveToKnow 1911

APPREHENSION (Lat. ad, to; prehendere, to seize), in psychology, a term applied to a mode of consciousness in which nothing is affirmed or denied of the object in question, but the mind is merely aware of ("seizes") it. "Judgment" (says Reid, ed. Hamilton, i. p. 414) "is an act of the mind specifically different from simple apprehension or the bare conception of a thing"; and again, "Simple apprehension or conception can neither be true nor false." This distinction provides for the large class of mental acts in which we are simply aware of or "take in" a number of familiar objects, about which we in general make no judgment unless our attention is suddenly called by a new feature. Or again two alternatives may be apprehended without any resultant judgment as to their respective merits. Similarly G. F. Stout points out that while we have a very vivid idea of a character or an incident in a work of fiction, we can hardly be said in any real sense to have any belief or to make any judgment as to its existence or truth. With this mental state may be compared the purely aesthetic contemplation of music, wherein apart from, say, a false note, the faculty of judgment is for the time inoperative. To these examples may be added the fact that one can fully understand an argument in all its bearings without in any way judging its validity.

Under

Census.

Apportionment.

pp

Whole

Number of

Repre-

sentatives.

Year.

Population.

Year.

Ratio.

Constitution. .

.

..

1789

30,000

65

First Census. .

1 79 0

3,929,214

1793

33,000

105

Second Census. .

1800

5,308,483

1803

33,000

141

Third Census. .

1810

7,239,881

1813

35,000

181

Fourth Census. .

1820

9,633,822

1823

40,000

213

Fifth Census. .

1830

12,866,020

1833

47,700

240

Sixth Census. .

1840

17,069,453

1843

70,680

223

Seventh Census .

1850

23,191,876

1853

93,423

234

Eighth Census. .

1860

31,443,321

1863

127,381

243

Ninth Census. .

18 7 0

38,558,371

1873

131,425

292

Tenth Census. .

1880

50,155,783

1883

151,911

325

Eleventh Census .

1890

62,622,250

1893

173,901

356

Twelfth Census .

1900

75,568,686

1903

194,182

386

Without going into the question fully, it may be pointed out that the distinction between judgment and apprehension is relative. In every kind of thought there is judgment of some sort in a greater or less degree of prominence. Judgment and thought are in fact psychologically distinguishable merely as different, though correlative, activities of consciousness. Professor Stout further investigates the phenomena of apprehension, and comes to the conclusion that "it is possible to distinguish and identify a whole without apprehending any of its constituent details." On the other hand, if the attention focuses itself for a time on the apprehended object, there is an expectation that such details will as it were emerge into consciousness. Hence he describes such apprehension as "implicit," and in so far as the implicit apprehension determines the order of such emergence he describes it as "schematic." A good example of this process is the use of formulae in calculations; ordinarily the formula is used without question; if attention is fixed upon it, the steps by which it is shown to be universally applicable emerge and the "schema" is complete in detail.

With this result may be compared Kant's theory of apprehension as a synthetic act (the "synthesis of apprehension") by which the sensory elements of a perception are subjected to the formal conditions of time and space.

See G. F. Stout, Analytic Psychology (London, 1896); F. Brentano, Psychologie (bk. ii. ch. vii.), and Vom Ursprung sittlicher Erkenntnis; B. Titchener, Outlines of Psychology (New York, 1902), and text-books of psychology. Also Psychology.


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