The photoplay; a psychological study (1916)

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ATTENTION on our mind, they disappear. If we are fully absorbed in our book, we do not bear at all wbat is said around us and we do not see the room; we forget everything. Our attention to the page of the book brings with it our lack of attention to everything else. We may add a third factor. We feel that our body adjusts itself to the perception. Our head enters into the movement of listening for the sound, our eyes are fixating the point in the outer world. We hold all our muscles in ten- sion in order to receive the fullest possible impression with our sense organs. The lens in our eye is accommodated exactly to the correct distance. In short our bodily person- ality works toward the fullest possible im- pression. But this is supplemented by a fourth factor. Our ideas and feelings and impulses group themselves around the at- tended object. It becomes the starting point for our actions while all the other objects in the sphere of our senses lose their grip on our ideas and feelings. These four factors are intimately related to one another. As we are passing along the street we see something in the shop window and as soon as it stirs up our interest, our body adjusts itself, we 85