1. ALTHOUGH for convenience we use the terms Life and Mind as representing distinct orders of phenomena, the one objective and the other subjective, and although for centuries they have designated distinct entities, or forces having different substrata, we may now consider it sufficiently acknowledged among scientific thinkers that every problem of Mind is necessarily a problem of Life, referring to one special group of vital activities.
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The Physical Basis of Mind (1877) (Thoemmes Press - Classics in Psychology)
November 1, 1998, Thoemmes Continuum
Hardcover
in English
1855066661 9781855066663
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"1. ALTHOUGH for convenience we use the terms Life and Mind as representing distinct orders of phenomena, the one objective and the other subjective, and although for centuries they have designated distinct entities, or forces having different substrata, we may now consider it sufficiently acknowledged among scientific thinkers that every problem of Mind is necessarily a problem of Life, referring to one special group of vital activities."
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