Title: Cartesian Dualism
1Cartesian Dualism
2Real Distinction Argument
- P1. Whatever can be clearly and distinctly
conceived apart can exist apart. - P2. Whatever can exist apart are necessarily
distinct from one another. - P3. I can clearly and distinctly conceive my
mind apart from my body. - P4. Therefore, my mind can exist apart from my
body. - -----------------------------------------------
------------------ - C. Therefore, my mind is necessarily distinct
from my body.
3Real Distinction Argument
- P1. Whatever can be clearly and distinctly
conceived apart can exist apart. - P2. Whatever can exist apart are necessarily
distinct from one another. - P3. I can clearly and distinctly conceive my
mind apart from my body. - P4. Therefore, my mind can exist apart from my
body. - -----------------------------------------------
------------------ - C. Therefore, my mind is necessarily distinct
from my body. - A way of talking about the possibility of
separation even where there is no such actual
separation.
4Real Distinction Argument
- P1. Whatever can be clearly and distinctly
conceived apart can exist apart. - P2. Whatever can exist apart are necessarily
distinct from one another. - P3. I can clearly and distinctly conceive my
mind apart from my body. - P4. Therefore, my mind can exist apart from my
body. - -----------------------------------------------
------------------ - C. Therefore, my mind is necessarily distinct
from my body. - A consequence of the necessity of the
non-separability of identical things.
5Real Distinction Argument
- P1. Whatever can be clearly and distinctly
conceived apart can exist apart. - P2. Whatever can exist apart are necessarily
distinct from one another. - P3. I can clearly and distinctly conceive my
mind apart from my body. - P4. Therefore, my mind can exist apart from my
body. - -----------------------------------------------
------------------ - C. Therefore, my mind is necessarily distinct
from my body. - A conclusion that Descartes reached in
Meditations 1, 2.
6Real Distinction Argument(Deriving the 3rd
Premiss)
- He cant be certain that bodies exist because the
evidence for them is merely sensory, and the
senses can be deceived. - The same possibility of error does not exist for
the claim that his mind exists. (Cogito ergo
sum.) - So he exists as a thinking thing. But are mind
and body distinct? Consider their essences. - The example of wax the essence of the wax is
extension (occupying space) and is known not
through the senses but through a purely mental
contemplation - the essence of Mind is thinking.
- The fact that the idea of thinking does not
entail the idea of extension or vice versa shows
that the one cannot be a mode of the other.
7Real Distinction ArgumentObjections
- He has not shown that he has a clear and distinct
idea of the mind apart from the body. - He assumes that unless the concept of body is a
part of the definition of mind a complete
concept of the mind is possible apart from that
of the body - BUT
- there might be necessary external relations
between things that rules out having a complete
concept of the one without the other. Eg.
correlative terms like parent and child
8Real Distinction ArgumentObjections
- Excluding Body from my essence is just an
intellectual abstraction - Compare thinking of something as being a right
angled triangle but doubting whether the square
of its hypotenuse was the sum of the squares of
the other two sides.
9Real Distinction ArgumentObjections
- The argument is a fallacy.
- p1. I can conceive of my mind as unextended.
- p2. I can not conceive of my body as unextended.
- ------------------------------------------
------------- - c. Therefore my body and my mind are distinct.
- BUT
- p1. I can conceive of the evening star as being
different from Venus. - p2. I can not conceive of Venus as being
different from Venus. - -------------------------------------------------
---------------------- - c. Therefore the evening star and Venus are
distinct.
10The Argument from Divisibility
- P1. The mind is indivisible.
- P2. The body is divisible.
- P3. If A is identical with B, then any property
that A has B also has. - -------------------------------------------------
----------------------------- - C. Therefore, the mind is distinct from the body.
11The Argument from DivisibilityObjections
- It makes very good sense to talk about the parts
of a mind or even of divided minds. - Certain cognitive functions depend upon the body,
such as perception, memory. - Descartes equivocates upon the word division
12Mind/Body Dualism
- Popular Dualism
- The Mind drives the body like a man in a tank.
13Mind/Body Dualism
- Substance Dualism
- The world consists of at least two types of
thing, two substances, one of which is material
and is essentially extended, and the other of
which is mental and is essentially thinking .
14Mind/Body DualismObservations
- Mind does not give life to the body
- The soul does not dwell in the body like a pilot
in a ship - Descartes says that the soul is substantially
united to the body, or mixed up in it. - a subtle fluid the animal spirit flows
through the nerves and is the medium of
communication between mind and body. - Mind Pineal gland Nerve fibres Limbs
- Sense organs Nerve fibres Pineal
gland Mind
15Mind/Body DualismObjections
- The most common objection to substance dualism is
that it is inconceivable that the two substances
should be able to affect each other at all. - Responses
- a. Occasionalism.
- b. Pre-established Harmony.
- c. Double-Aspect.
Descartes to Princess Elizabeth I beg Your
Highness to feel free to attribute this matter
and extension to the soul because that is simply
to conceive of it as united to the body.
Princess Elizabeth to Descartes I admit it
would be easier for me to concede matter and
extension to the soul than the capacity of moving
a body and of being moved, to an immaterial being.
16Mind/Body DualismObjections
- The most common objection to substance dualism is
that it is inconceivable that the two substances
should be able to affect each other at all. - There are objections to Dualism on the grounds of
various conservation laws. - Ockams Razor. There is no increase in
explanatory power provided by this new substance.
- Scientific Psychology speaks against dualism.