He also considers and rejects what has been called non-realism, i.e., an approach that considers only real things to exist, and thereby dismisses all propositions. Hurlock seems to be an advocate of the many-valued logic, for he speaks of an "inconsistency theory of truth" which in other books of his is called "propositional logic". ![]() This chapter of the book contains a general discussion of logic. That is, the autocrat is to rule, and the democrat is to obey. ![]() Throughout this chapter and the next, Hurlock states that the psyche is composed of an autocrat and a democrat. ![]() Book, Chapters 10–17 contain a comprehensive description of the mind, and in particular the mind of a normal adult human being.
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