| 1 |
Amativeness |
Physical Love |
|
| 2 |
Philoprogenitiveness
Parental Love |
A particular feeling which watches over and provides for helpless offspring, or parental
love |
|
| 3 |
Adhesiveness
Friendship |
A feeling or attraction to become friendly with other persons, or to increase social
contacts |
|
| 4 |
Combativeness |
The disposition to quarrel and fight |
|
| 5 |
Destructiveness |
The propensity to destroy |
|
| 6 |
Secretiveness |
The propensity to conceal, predisposes the individual to Cunning and Slyness |
|
| 7 |
Acquisitiveness |
The propensity to acquire |
|
| 8 |
Self-Esteem |
This sentiment gives us a great opinion of ourselves, constituing self-love |
|
| 9 |
Approbativeness |
This faculty seeks the approbation of others. It makes us attentive to the opinion
entertained by others of ourselves |
|
| 10 |
Cautiousness |
This organ incites us to take precautions |
|
| 11 |
Individuality |
This faculty contributes to the recognition of the existence of individual beings,
and facilitates the embodiment of several elements into one |
|
| 12 |
Locality |
This faculty conceives of places occupied by the objects that surround us |
|
| 13 |
Form |
This allows us to understand the shapes of objects |
|
| 14 |
Verbal memory |
The memory for words. |
|
| 15 |
Language |
Philology in General |
|
| 16 |
Coloring |
This organ cognizes, recollects, and judges the relations of colors |
|
| 17 |
Tune |
The organ of musical perception |
|
| 18 |
Calculativeness
Number |
The organ responsible for the ability to calculate and to handle numbers and figures |
|
| 19 |
Constructiveness |
The faculty leading to the will of constructing something |
|
| 20 |
Comparison |
This faculty compares the sensations and notions excited by all other faculties,
points out their similitudes, analogies, differences or identity, and comprehends their relations, harmony or discord |
|
| 21 |
Causality |
This faculty allows us to understand reason behind events |
|
| 22 |
Vitativeness
Wit |
This faculty predisposes men to view every thing in a joyful way |
|
| 23 |
Ideality |
This facultiy vivifies the other faculties and impresses a peculiar character called
ideal |
|
| 24 |
Benevolence |
This power produces mildness and goodness, compassion, and kidness, humanity |
|
| 25 |
Imitativeness |
This organ produces a fondness for acting and for dramatic representation |
|
| 26 |
Generation |
This faculty allows us to come up with new ideas |
|
| 27 |
Firmeness |
This faculty gives constancy and perseverance to the other powers, contributing to
maintain theis activity |
|
| 28 |
Time |
The faculty of time conceives the duration phenomena |
|
| 29 |
Eventuality |
This faculty recognizes the activity of every other, and acts in turn upon all of
them |
|
| 30 |
Inhabitiveness |
The instinct that prompts one to select a particular dwelling, often called attachment
to home |
|
| 31 |
Reverence
Veneration |
By this organ's agency man adores God, venerates saints, and respoects persons and
things |
|
| 32 |
Concientiousness |
This organ produces a feeling of justice and conscientiousness, or the love of truth
and duty |
|
| 33 |
Hope |
Hopes induces a belief in the possibility of whatever the other faculties desire,
it inspires optimism about future events. |
|
| 34 |
Marvelousness |
This sentiment inspires belief in the true and the false prophet, and aids superstition,
but is also essential to the belief in the doctriness of religion |
|
| 35 |
Size |
This organ provides notions of the dimensions or size of external objects |
|
| 36 |
Weight and resistance |
This faculty procures the knowledge of the specific gravity of objects, and is of
use whenever weigth or resistance are worked upon whith the hands, or by means of tolls. |
|
| 37 |
Order |
This faculty gives method and order to objects only as they are physically related |
|