Mind Body Dualism
Mind Body Dualism
Mind Body Dualism
The great philosophical distinction between mind and body can be traced to the Greeks Ren Descartes (1596-1650), French mathematician, philosopher, and physiologist gave the first systematic account of the mind/body relationship. He claimed that minds and brains are substances of different kind.
Mental substance
Attribute of thought (non-spatial!) Modes of thought (images, emotions, beliefs, desires) Private *
Epistemic properties they concern the character of our knowledge of such things
Mind and body look very different, but there seems to be a mutual influence
The ontological grounding suggests that different attributes are distinctive, hence the exclude each other. Minds are distinctive from bodies
Nevertheless, mind and bodies are intimately related The body causally affects the mind (the mind receives signals from your body) The mind causally affects the body (the body responses to your plans)
Dualism makes sense of the apparent bifurcation of mind and body. The qualities of our experience (modes of thought) seems to differ dramatically from the qualities of material bodies (modes of extension)
The metaphysical distance Descartes places between minds and bodies seems to preclude their causally interacting. Fundamental presumption of modern science: Immaterial minds cannot affect the material world. The material world is causally closed.
Causal interaction between the mind and the body occurs in the pineal gland. Animal spirits, fluids made up of extremely fine particles flowing around the pineal gland, cause it to move in various ways, and these motions of the gland cause conscious states of the mind. Conversely, the mind can cause the gland to move in various ways, affecting the flow of the surrounding animal spirits. This in turn influences the flow of these fluids to different parts of the body.
10
1. Mental phenomena are non-physical (Dualism) This is the basic assumption of each kind of dualism. 2. Mental phenomena can affect physical phenomena (Mental Cause) This is the assumption that mental states or events play a causal role. Mental states are effective, for example, when wishes or intentions lead to actions. 3. The domain of physical phenomena is causally closed (Causal Closure) This is the basic insights of modern science starting with the development of modern physics in the 17th century. Obviously, the three claims are in conflict. They are logically incompatible!
11
Causal Closure
Cartesian Dualism solves this conflict by skipping Causal Closure. Other solutions are possible. We sketch first idealistic solutions and consider then materialist solutions in more detail.
12
According to Leibnitz no coherent sense can be made of Descartes idea that the mind, which isnt even in physical space, can causally interact with a material body (pineal gland). On his view, the mind and the body are in a preestablished harmony, rather like the clocks that were synchronized by the shopkeeper in the morning, with God having started off our minds and bodies in a harmonic relationship.
13
Malebranche argued that both of Descartes' substances, mind and body, are causally ineffective. God is the one and only true cause. Not only is there no influence of mind on body or of body on mind, there is no causality operative at all except insofar as God, the one true cause, intervenes to produce the regularities that occur in experience. Thus, for example, when a person wills to move a finger, that serves as the occasion for God to move the finger; when an object suddenly appears in a person's field of view, that serves as the occasion for God to produce a visual perception in the person's mind.
14
Idealists hold that not only the impression of mind-body causal interaction is an illusion, but that the material world is itself an illusion. Bishop George Berkeley, the founder of idealism, wrote that we do not perceive the physical world directly because there simply is no physical world. On this view, the world consists exclusively of minds and their contents. What we do experience is our sensations. Idealism has the advantage of saving the appearances.
15
Discussion
It banishes problems associated with causal interaction between minds and the material world. In some way, idealism has a kind of elegant simplicity of the sort valued in the sciences. But this is simply not enough. Consider the schizophrenic whose mental experiences consist of various hallucinations. A patient such as this may strongly believe that he is, for example, Stalin. Of course, in the reality of those who are not schizophrenic this is absurd. What must be considered is that these are two very different realities, yet both are very real as well. If the mind is the only reality, as idealists hold, then the schizophrenic really is Stalin in his own reality. Berkeley addressed the issue of free will as well. He claimed that we do not produce our own sensations, but that God puts sensations into our minds. With this, Berkeley completely eliminates the possibility of free will. Instead he was left with determinism. Thus he proposed that God telepathically controls humans.
16
Spinoza abandoned Descartes' two-substance view in favour of what has come to be called double-aspect theory. Doubleaspect theories are based on the notion that the mental and the physical are simply different aspects of one and the same substance. For Spinoza, that single substance was God. While agreeing with Descartes that the world of consciousness and that of extension are qualitatively separate, Spinoza rejected the Cartesian view that consciousness and extension are attributes of two finite substances in favour of the notion that they are attributes of only one infinite substance. That substance, God, is the universal essence or nature of everything that exists.
17
Epiphenomenalists hold that the brain causes mental events, but those mental events cannot cause behaviour. In this view, mental events are neurological by-products and are behaviourally impertinent. Mental events exists, but they are side effects of complex physical systems only, without any causal consequences. Epiphenomenalism, just as idealism, precludes the possibility of free will. If the environment causes brain activity and brain processes dictate our behaviour, then humans simply exist passively and in a state of powerlessness.
18
Summary