ABSTRACT

Fort, Charles The interpretations will be mine, but the data will be for anybody to form his own opinions on.

Jennings, H.S. . . . the biologist has a more intimate access to a certain sample of his material, for he is himself that sample. Through this fact he discovers certain things about the materials of biological science that he cannot discover by the other method alone. . . he finds that the thing to be studied by the biologist include emotions, sensations, impulses, desires. . . Thus the biologist has two sets of data, discovered in somewhat different ways, one set being discoverable only through the fact that the biologist is himself a biological specimen.