“ Things which put us in mind of others must be neither too like nor too unlike them. ”
Samuel Butler, The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912). copy citation
Author | Samuel Butler |
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Source | The Note-Books of Samuel Butler |
Topic | mind |
Date | 1912 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/6173/6173-h/6173-h.htm |
Context
“There are rain-drops of new experiences in every life which are not within the hold of our memory or past experience, and, as each one of these rain-drops came originally from something outside, the whole river of our life has in its inception nothing to do with memory, though it is only through memory that the rain-drops of new experience can ever unite to form a full flowing river of variously organised life and intelligence.
Memory and Mistakes
Memory vanishes with extremes of resemblance or difference. Things which put us in mind of others must be neither too like nor too unlike them. It is our sense that a position is not quite the same which makes us find it so nearly the same. We remember by the aid of differences as much as by that of samenesses. If there could be no difference there would be no memory, for the two positions would become absolutely one and the same, and the universe would repeat itself for ever and ever as between these two points.”
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