Psychical contagion (gcide) | Psychic \Psy"chic\, Psychical \Psy"chic*al\, a. [L. psychicus,
    Gr. ?, fr. psychh` the soul, mind; cf. ? to blow: cf. F.
    psychique.]
    1. Of or pertaining to the human soul, or to the living
       principle in man.
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    Note: This term was formerly used to express the same idea as
          psychological. Recent metaphysicians, however, have
          employed it to mark the difference between psychh` the
          living principle in man, and pney^ma the rational or
          spiritual part of his nature. In this use, the word
          describes the human soul in its relation to sense,
          appetite, and the outer visible world, as distinguished
          from spiritual or rational faculties, which have to do
          with the supersensible world. --Heyse.
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    2. Of or pertaining to the mind, or its functions and
       diseases; mental; -- contrasted with physical.
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    Psychical blindness, Psychical deafness (Med.), forms of
       nervous disease in which, while the senses of sight and
       hearing remain unimpaired, the mind fails to appreciate
       the significance of the sounds heard or the images seen.
       
 
    Psychical contagion, the transference of disease,
       especially of a functional nervous disease, by mere force
       of example.
 
    Psychical medicine, that department of medicine which
       treats of mental diseases.
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