We’re excited to share some big news: SquarePages.co is now OpenChapter.io! Read more in the latest blog post here.
Book cover

The Mind and the Brain Being the Authorised Translation of L'Âme et le Corps

By Alfred Binet

(3.5 stars) • 10 reviews

Venture into a world where science and philosophy meet, challenging the boundaries between thought and reality and what they may seem to be.

Genres
Released
2007-04-14
Formats
epub3 (images)
epub (images)
mobi
mobi (images)
epub
txt
Read Now

Summary

"The Mind and the Brain" by Alfred Binet is a exploration into the science of the mind in relation to the body, concentrating primarily on consciousness and the senses. Binet seeks to clarify the differences between mental and physical events, tackling various philosophical viewpoints while developing his thoughts on the topic. The book begins by presenting the difficult problem of distinguishing the mind from the physical, which becomes hard to define when examined closely, despite how easily we contrast how we think with tangible things. Our grasp of what is around us depends on our sensations, which serve as a medium linking us and what we see. After analyzing generally used philosophical technics to defining a concept Binet makes a case for a more organized method that looks closely at mental states and the sensory details that shape how we know about the physical world.

About the Author

Alfred Binet, born Alfredo Binetti, was a French psychologist who together with Théodore Simon invented the first practical intelligence test, the Binet–Simon test. In 1904, Binet took part in a commission set up by the French Ministry of Education to decide whether school children with learning difficulties should be sent to a special boarding school attached to a lunatic asylum, as advocated by the French psychiatrist and politician Désiré-Magloire Bourneville, or whether they should be educated in classes attached to regular schools as advocated by the Société libre pour l'étude psychologique de l'enfant (SLEPE) of which Binet was a member. There was also debate over who should decide whether a child was capable enough for regular education. Bourneville argued that a psychiatrist should do this based on a medical examination. Binet and Simon wanted this to be based on objective evidence. This was the beginning of the IQ test. A preliminary version was published in 1905. The full version was published in 1908, and slightly revised in 1911, just before Binet's death.

Average Rating
4.0
Aggregate review score sourced from Goodreads
5
200
4
200
3
200
2
200
1
200
Total Reviews
10.0k
Total reviews from Goodreads may change