Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Substance Dualism
- There are two ontologically distinct
substances that make up a human
being: mind and body
- mind is a
substance that
possesses mental
properties
- beliefs
- memories
- thoughts
- emotions
- body is a
substance that
possesses physical
properties
- height
- mass
- Arguments for Dualism
- doubt
- I cannot doubt I am a thinking thing
- cogito ergo sum
- But I can doubt the existence of my body
- Leibniz' Law: what I cannot doubt cannot be the same as what I can doubt
- Therefore mind and body cannot be the same
- other differences between mental and physical properties
- mental states are private
- mental properties possess qualia - they are subjective
- what is subjective cannot be reduced to what is objective
- Indivisibility
- body is divisible - mind is not
- body has the attribute of extension, and what is
extended in space is divisible
- mind is non-extended and does not
physically exist in space therefore it is
indivisible
- Descartes: "it is one and
the same mind that wills,
and understands and has
sensory perceptions"
- Is Descartes simply being misled by the seductive grammatical use of 'I' to describe a unitary individual?
- Counter to indivisibility
- division of the unconscious
and the conscious
- multiple personality disorders
- Arguments against Dualism
- Mind-body problem
- human experience is of one unitary embodied mind
- substance dualism cannot give an
adequate account of mental
causation
- Counter
- Descartes would argue the relationship between mind and body is merely causal
- the mind does need the brain to function but
that does not mean it is not logically distinct from
it
- analogy - the body needs oxygen to function yet the body
is a completely separate substance from oxygen
- Leads to Solipsism
- Mental
substances are
private and
therefore could
be different from
anyone else's
- Experience refers solely to my experiences
- How can I know anyone else has a
mind if I cannot have any
phenomenological experience of
other people's mental states
- Counter
- Argument from analogy
- i have a mind,
by analogy, its
logical to think
other people do
to
- experience presupposes other minds
- it is human nature to observe
behaviour and attribute mental states
- I couldn't have thoughts without other minds existing