[Illusions by James Sully]@TWC D-Link book
Illusions

CHAPTER II
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By these the term illusion is commonly employed in a narrow, technical sense, and opposed to hallucination.

An illusion, it is said, must always have its starting-point in some actual impression, whereas a hallucination has no such basis.

Thus it is an illusion when a man, under the action of terror, takes a stump of a tree, whitened by the moon's rays, for a ghost.

It is a hallucination when an imaginative person so vividly pictures to himself the form of some absent friend that, for the moment, he fancies himself actually beholding him.

Illusion is thus a partial displacement of external fact by a fiction of the imagination, while hallucination is a total displacement.
This distinction, which has been adopted by the majority of recent alienists[1], is a valuable one, and must not be lost sight of here.


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