ON THE PSYCHO-PHYSICAL VIEW OF NATURE. 545 



more practical to range the whole of these researches 

 within that great realm of thought which starts with a 

 distinct recognition of conscious individual life as its 

 source and centre. As such, in fact, these researches 

 have been till quite recently carried on, and the main 

 lines of their recent development belong accordingly to 

 philosophic as distinguished from scientific or exact 

 thought. 



The three great facts, however, which even the exact so. 



The three 



treatment of mental phenomena has impressed upon us 

 namely, the existence of centralised material systems, 

 termed "individuals," the discontinuity of their inner 

 life as viewed from outside, and the phenomenon of its 

 growing external manifestation have driven natural 

 philosophers to form some explanation, or at least to 

 venture upon a definition of this hidden principle, 

 which shows itself in the highest forms of living matter, 

 and which, though discontinuous to the external observer, 

 acquires in the aggregate of human society a continuous 

 and ever growing reality and development. Two dis- 



legitimate. As the crystal to complex whose external and in- 

 the mineralogist, the vibrating ternal movements are causally as 

 string to the student of acoustics, rigidly connected amongst each 

 so also the animal, and even man, other, and with the movements 

 is to the physicist only a piece of i of the environment, as the work- 

 matter. That the animal experi- ing of a machine is with the 



ences pleasure and pain that with 

 the material life of the human 

 frame are connected the joys and 



revolution of its wheels (p. 4). 

 Thus the physiologist as physicist. 

 But he stands behind the scene, 



sorrows of a soul and the vivid j and while he painfully examines 

 intellectual life of a consciousness ; ' the mechanism and the busy doings 

 this cannot change the animal and { of the actors behind the drop- 

 human body for the physical j scenes, he misses the sense of the 

 student into anything other than whole which the spectator easily 

 it ia a material complex subject recognises from the front. Could 

 to the unalterable laws which the physiologist not, for once, 

 govern also the stone and the change his position?" (p. 5.) 

 substance of the plant, a material 



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