Philosophy of mind

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    Bernard Williams Identity

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    hair, facial features, or is it someone’s mental thoughts and memories? In “The Self and the Future”, Bernard William’s analyzes the topic of personal identity with possible objections and outcomes. He brings forth the idea of the body theory and the mind theory while creating two thought experiments to further prove his point that both are necessary. In this paper I will consider what exactly creates personal identity while I assume that an idea of personal identity already exists. Bernard…

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    The Mind/Body Problem

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    How should the Mind/Body Problem be solved? Introduction The mind and body problem has been around for many years and since then many solutions to the problem have been offered, yet none have been widely accepted. The mind and body seem to be two very different substances, however, the question poses. How do they interact? How can a mind effect the body if it’s a different entity and how can the body effect the mind? Although this problem may appear simple, it is yet to have a satisfactory…

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    this paper, I will be discussing and analyzing the relationship between the body and mind of people who are suffering from disabilities and diseases. Can the body be independent of the mind, and vice versa, in this group of people? I will answer this by, first, explaining some general information about the anatomy and science of the mind and body. Secondly, I will share my arguments and defenses on how the mind and body are disconnected, mechanically and psychologically, within the population of…

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    specifically mind-body dualism or body-soul dualism. The second theme is looking at the idea of embodiment. There are other themes in this article, but these were the two that stood out to me the most. Christianity and Body-Soul Dualism Body-soul dualism has been a belief that has been held by Christians for centuries. However, according to this article by Brown and Strawn, the origin of this view is not that of Hebrew-Christian thought, but rather Greek philosophy. This philosophy…

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    considered to be a sense. Descartes believed that there are solely two substances to ever exist, mind and matter. Descartes supposed that the body is nothing but a statue or a machine where the way the body functions can be accounted for mechanically except for the activities of the mind where none can be seen, touched, smelled, tasted or heard. Along with sensation, Descartes believes that the mind also influences the body through emotions and feelings. This theory is called “Dualism”,…

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    Does Identity Theory provide a plausible solution to the mind-body problem? The mind body problem asks many questions but the question that will be focused on in this essay is what is the relationship between the body and the mind, in other words the relationship between the physical and the non-physical. This question arose from Cartesian Dualism: the theory that the mind and the body must be separate because they consist of two totally different substances. Substances being “are those things…

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    Concept Of Dualism

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    people connect with the world through various mental and physical involvements. Physical experiences are bodily actions, which include breathing, consuming, drinking, sleeping, talking, and walking to name a few. Mental experiences are actions of the mind, which include numerous emotions, needing, determining, questioning, recalling and the list keeps going. For years, philosophers have debated the understanding of these feelings and experiences. For quite some time, Cartesian Dualism was a…

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    John Searle Dualism Essay

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    Searle and Rene Descartes on dualism. Dualism claims that all real objects are either physical or nonphysical. Rene Descartes maintains that reality is composed of two substances: mind and body. Mind is immaterial essence and body in material essence. All our thoughts and feelings are immaterial and exist in our mind, while our body exists in material space. He believed that they interact with each other at some point in the body. On the other hand, John Searle holds a version of dualism…

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    In the following essay, one wishes to discuss why there can never be any justification for a belief in Other Minds. Descartes offers up “I think therefore I am” in First Meditations on Philosophy (Descartes, 1641), which has it’s fair share of problems but one wishes to use this quote to illustrate that while Descartes only proved that ‘I’ exist within one 's own mind, there is nothing to say that this must extend to others too. Or even to anyone but Descartes and Myself. And while that may seem…

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    Descartes ends this mediation by saying “Perhaps nothing is certain” (Descartes 347) tying in to the exact feelings of Cobb with his overpowering uncertainty. In conclusion, For Cobb’s he has chosen the world that has deceived him but knows that his mind and body exist and that is all that matters. For Descartes does not know that truth but knows that knowledge exists because he does exist. Descartes rationalism debate proves that all knowledge is rational. Cobb would have been able to know…

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