A fair and effective critique of eliminative materialism should occur in a domain in which the theory is plausible and strong. Thus, rather than examining normal patients, we should examine ones marked by neurological dysfunction. If psychological explanations are useful, even for disorders associated with well-defined and causally relevant brain dysfunction, then eliminative materialism would be undermined where it seems most plausible. Implicitly, then, it would also be undermined in ordinary behavior. If eliminative materialism could be weakened where it is strongest (i.e., in neuropsychiatric illness), then the general case against it would be bolstered as well.