That resolution, as I think we agreed, is a mental formula.
The memory of my action is an image.
I contemplate that image and put the question to myself.
What shall I say dies that image satisfy the stipulations of that resolution or not?
The answer is necessarily a mental formula, a judgement.
The answer to any question is of that nature.
It is accompanied by a certain quality of feeling.
Every judgement is so accompanied.
Hence if the judgement is that the stipulations of the resplation are satisfied there is a quality of feeling which we can call, if we [?sk] feeling of satisfaction.
But it is needful to distingiush carefully between the judgement and the quality of feeling.
As well as I can discern the phenomena all action in accordance with a determination is accompanied by a feeling which is pleasureable.
But I have some doubt whether the feeling at any instant is at that instant recognized as pleasurable.
As we begin to perform any acts that had been determined upon, there is a sense of joy, in which we anticipate a pleasure and, in doing so, because more conscious of our need.
In the srt we perhaps have a feeling of pleasure.
As soon as we the act is done, and often when it is only part done we begin to review it.
After the interviewI was speaking of