Psychology, asked by mehakw472, 1 month ago

sense of sameness by William James​

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Answered by arjun8114
0

Answer:

The Principles of Psychology William James (1890) CHAPTER XII. CONCEPTION. THE SENSE OF SAMENESS. In Chapter VIII, p. 221, the distinction was drawn between two kinds of knowledge of things, bare acquaintance with them and knowledge about them. The possibility of two such knowledges depends on a fundamental psychical peculiarity which m

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Answered by tejrambhatt54
1

Answer:

As William James ( 1890 ) wrote over a century ago: The mind can always intend, and know when it intends, to think of the Same . . . . This sense of sameness is the very keel and backbone of our thinking.

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