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The Physical Basis of Mind / Being the Second Series of Problems of Life and Mind. cover

The Physical Basis of Mind / Being the Second Series of Problems of Life and Mind.

Chapter 71: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

The text investigates the biological foundations of mental phenomena, arguing that psychology must root itself in organismal and social conditions. It presents four essays on the nature of life, the nervous mechanism, animal automatism, and reflex action, combining physiological description with philosophical critique. The author emphasizes a biological rather than metaphysical or purely mechanical viewpoint, warns against speculative assumptions such as imaginary anatomy and the unexamined primacy of the nerve-cell, and proposes extending competition principles to tissues and organs. The work seeks to reconcile mechanical explanations of movement with biological complexity and to show how physical processes relate to mental aspects without reducing one wholly to the other.

Transcriber’s Notes

Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.

Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left unbalanced.

Illustrations in this eBook have been positioned between paragraphs and nearer to the text that references them.

Footnotes in this eBook have been collected and moved to the end of the book.

The Table of Contents entry for Problem II, Chapter II, referenced the wrong page; corrected here.