Title: Descartes, Mind Body Dualism, Materialism and Idealism
1Descartes, Mind Body Dualism, Materialism and
Idealism
2Descartes
René Descartes (1596-1650) is one of the most
important Western philosophers of the past few
centuries. During his lifetime, Descartes was
just as famous as an original physicist,
physiologist and mathematician. But it is as a
highly original philosopher that he is most
frequently read today. He attempted to restart
philosophy in a fresh direction. For example, his
philosophy refused to accept the Aristotelian and
Scholastic traditions that had dominated
philosophical thought throughout the Medieval
period it attempted to fully integrate
philosophy with the 'new' sciences and Descartes
changed the relationship between philosophy and
theology. Such new directions for philosophy made
Descartes into a revolutionary figure.
3Descartes
- Intuition of the mind
- I think therefore I am
- The deduction of God
- I have an idea of perfection. There must be a
perfect being to be its cause. There must be a
perfect being god. - The deduction of Matter
- We sense an external world all we are including
the ideas of matter must come from god. God would
not deceive us or he would have a moral defect
and he is perfect hence there must be matter.
4Descartes
God
Mind
Matter
5Objections to Descartes
- Does thinker require a thinker?
- Could the concept of god be possible without a
god? - The really big problem the mind body problem!
6The Mind-Body Problem
- There are two kinds of stuff
- Incorporeal stuff the essence of what we think
- Corporal stuff the essence of what can be
extended. (Extendist and Non-extendist) - How can the come together?
- If the mind and body are different substances how
can there be a casual connection between them?
7Descartes answer to the mind-body problem
- Interactionism
- There is a place (the pineal gland) where the
mind and the body come together and the mind can
influence the body.
8From Dualism to Monolism
Mind-Body Dualism
Idealism
Materialism
9Idealism
- Idea ism. All things are constituted by the
mind and its ideas - Objective idealism
- Things exist apart from our perception of them
- Subjective idealism
- Things are dependent on our perception for their
existence
10Berkeley and Locke
- Locke believed
- substance
- Knowing involves knowing and known. (the known is
a mental representation) - Primary quality (shape size etc)
- Secondary quality (colour, sound, texture, taste)
substance - Bishop George Berkeley
- To be is to be perceived.
11From Dualism to Monolism
Mind-Body Dualism
Idealism
Materialism
12Materialism
- Matter with its motion and qualities is the
ultimate reality of all things - A pre Socrates concept - Democritus
13Some key concepts round materialism
- Mechanistic materialism
- Man as a machine
- Man as a computer
- Every thing is predetermined just a set of
reactions to stimuli - Behaviourism - Skinner
14Materialism
- Materialism is a form of naturalism
- All that exists can be studies scientifically.
Use observation and experimentation
15Are the mind and the body the same?
Brain states Mind
Electrical impulses Brain waves
Thoughts, sensations, Consciousness
16Behaviorism
- Soft behaviorism
- Descriptions of behaviour
- Hard behaviorism
- There is nothing but behaviour
17Well????
- Music
- Art
- God
- Love
- Wanting to be better
18Skepticism
- Commonsense skepticism
- Every day doubt and suspension of judgement
- Philosophical skepticism
- Doubting some of the fundamental ideas within
philosophy Forms? - Absolute skepticism
- Those that believe that we know nothing