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" ... as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure any body but themselves, being for the most part of a hyperbolical or boasting nature, but now and then they are of a mischievous nature, and injurious to the characters... "
Medical Inquiries and Observations Upon the Diseases of the Mind - Page 261
by Benjamin Rush - 1830 - 365 pages
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A View of the Elementary Principles of Education: Founded on the ..., Volume 1

Johann Gaspar Spurzheim - 1828 - 550 pages
...some of uncommon talents, who are affected with the lying disease. Persons thus diseased, can neither speak the truth upon any subject, nor tell the same...body but themselves, being, for the most part, of an hyperbolical or boasting nature, and not injurious to the characters and property of others. That...
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A View of the Elementary Principles of Education: Founded on the Study of ...

Johann Gaspar Spurzheim - 1828 - 348 pages
...some of uncommon talents, who are affected with the lying disease. Persons thus diseased, can neither speak the truth upon any subject, nor tell the same...body but themselves, being, for the most part, of an hyperbolical or boasting nature, and not injurious to the characters and property of others. That...
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A View of the Elementary Principles of Education: Founded on the Study of ...

Johann Gaspar Spurzheim - 1832 - 346 pages
...gome of uncommon talents who are affected with the lying disease. Persons thus diseased, can neither speak the truth upon any subject, nor tell the same story twice in the same way, nor describe anything as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure any body...
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Elements of Mental Philosophy: Embracing the Two Departments of ..., Volume 2

Thomas Cogswell Upham - 1837 - 510 pages
...being influenced by none of the motives of any of them. Persons thus diseased cannot speak the truth on any subject nor tell the same story twice in the same...property of others. That it is a corporeal disease, [that is to say, in some way connected with a diseased state of the body,] I infer from its sometimes...
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Outlines of Imperfect and Disordered Mental Action

Thomas Cogswell Upham - 1840 - 420 pages
...Persons thus * Rush on the Diseases of the Mind, 2d ed., p. 113. diseased cannot speak the truth on any subject, nor tell the same story twice in the same way, nor describe anything as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure anybody...
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Elements of Mental Philosophy, embracing the two department of the Intellect ...

Thomas C. Upham - 1841 - 496 pages
...being influenced by none of the motives of any of them. Persons thus diseased cannot speak the truth on any subject, nor tell the same story twice in the same way, nor describe anything as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure anybody...
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Elements of Mental Philosophy Enbracing the Two Departments of the ..., Volume 2

Thomas Cogswell Upham - 1841 - 512 pages
...being influenced by none of the motives of any of them. Persons thus diseased cannot speak the truth on any subject, nor tell the same story twice in the same way, nor describe anything as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure anybody...
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Elements of Mental Philosophy

Thomas Cogswell Upham - 1855 - 416 pages
...speak the truth on any subject, noi tell the same story twice in the same way, nor de scribe anything as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure anybody but themselves, being for the most part of a hyperbolical or boasting nature, but now and then...
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Elements of Mental Philosophy: Embracing the Two Departments of ..., Volume 2

Thomas Cogswell Upham - 1845 - 488 pages
...being influenced by none of the motives of any of them. Persons thus diseased cannot speak the truth on any subject, nor tell the same story twice in the same way, nor describe anything as it has appeared to other people. Their falsehoods are seldom calculated to injure anybody...
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A Monograph on mental unsoundness

Francis Wharton - 1855 - 252 pages
...malicious lying, in being influenced by none of the motives of any of them. Persons thus diseased cannot speak the truth upon any subject, nor tell the same...in the same way, nor describe any thing as it has happened to other people. Their falsehoods (i) Journal of Psychological Med. Vol. II. p. 577. (j) See...
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