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Neural Action Corresponding to the Mental Functions of the Brain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 February 2018
Extract
While working purely on the lines of physical science it will be admitted that all observations recorded should be described in terms connoting physical phenomena, so given as to be capable of repetition, and, if possible, of measurement. No forces and no causes can be admitted as potent except those known to physiology and other branches of physical investigation. It follows that in dealing with the mental functions of the brain—here termed psychosis—we have nothing to do with “mind as an abstract entity” or with processes of feeling and consciousness, and must confine our attention to neural acts without either admitting or denying the existence of other potencies with which, while working on the lines of physical science, we are not concerned.
- Type
- Part 1.—Original Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1893
Footnotes
Paper read at the Psychology Section of the B. M. Asso iation, held at Nottingham, July, 1892.
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