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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