[The Mind and the Brain by Alfred Binet]@TWC D-Link book
The Mind and the Brain

CHAPTER I
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Thus there have been a very large number of distinctions proposed, and their number is much greater than is generally thought.

Since we propose to make ourselves judges of these distinctions, since, in fact, we shall reject most of them in order to suggest entirely new ones, it must be supposed that we shall do so by means of a criterion.

Otherwise, we should only be acting fantastically.

We should be saying peremptorily, "In my opinion this is mental," and there would be no more ground for discussion than, if the assertion were "I prefer the Romanticists to the Classicists," or "I consider prose superior to poetry." The criterion which I have employed, and which I did not analyse until the unconscious use I had made of it revealed its existence to me, is based on the two following rules:-- 1.

_A Rule of Method._--The distinction between mind and matter must not only apply to the whole of the knowable, but must be the deepest which can divide the knowable, and must further be one of a permanent character.


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