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BOOK I THE DEFINITION OF MATTER | |
CHAPTER I Introduction | |
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The distinction between mind and matter—Knowable not homogeneous—Criterion employed, enumeration not concepts | 3 |
CHAPTER II Our Knowledge of External Objects only Sensation | |
Modern theories of matter—Outer world only known to us by our sensations—Instances Mill's approval of proposition, and its defects—Nervous system only intermediary between self and outer world—The great X of Matter—Nervous system does not give us true image—Müller's law of specificity of the nerves—The nervous system itself a sensation—Relations of sensation with the unknowable the affair of metaphysics | 10 |