Lesson 4: Descartes; a dualist view

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Philosophy Through the Centuries
Advertisements

The value of certainty. Foundationalists suppose that true beliefs held with certainty (indubitable) together with logical and linguistic analysis offer.
Dualism. The reading for today is Ch. 1 of Philosophy of Mind: A Beginner’s Guide.
Cartesian Dualism. Real Distinction Argument P1.Whatever can be clearly and distinctly conceived apart can exist apart. P2.Whatever can exist apart are.
I move, therefore I am Physical Literacy June 2013 Jens E. Birch Oslo University College
Descartes’ rationalism
René Descartes ( ) Father of modern rationalism. Reason is the source of knowledge, not experience. All our ideas are innate. God fashioned us.
LECTURE 24 THE NATURE OF PERSONS PHYSICALISM AND DUALISM (“WHAT AM I?)
Section 2.2 You Are What You Eat Mind as Body 1 Empiricism Empiricism claims that the only source of knowledge about the external world is sense experience.
Philosophy 1010 Class 7/17/13 Title:Introduction to Philosophy Instructor:Paul Dickey Tonight: Finish.
Religious Views on Life after Death Philosophy of Religion Perspective
Chapter 10: What am I?.
René Descartes The father of modern Western philosophy and the epistemological turn Methodological doubt, his dreaming argument and the evil.
Chapter 2 The Mind-Body Problem
Descartes argument for dualism
Doubting Mind-Body Dualism
HUMAN NATURE AND MODERN PHILOSOPHY DESCARTES PHILOSOPHY 224.
Amy Dandron Helen Burkett
Philosophy of Mind Week 3: Objections to Dualism Logical Behaviorism
Life and Death Philosophical Perspectives. Two problems To discuss whether life after death is possible we need to understand two related philosophical.
Metaphysics.
Knowledge and Reality Lecture 2: Dualism. Dualism: what is it? Mind and body are different basic substances They have different essences The mind is essentially.
Chapter 2: Reality Modern Metaphysics: Descartes
Chapter 2 The Mind-Body Problem McGraw-Hill © 2013 McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved.
Mind-Body Dualism. The Mind-Body Problem The problem of explaining how a mind is connected to and interacts with a body whose mind it is, or the problem.
Human Nature 2.3 The Mind-Body Problem: How Do Mind and Body Relate?
“ta meta ta physika biblia” Literally: the books that come after the physics Today: subjects transcending, i.e., going beyond, the physical, e.g. the supernatural.
 Doubt- to be uncertain about something, to hesitate to believe  Dualism- the belief that the mind and body are separate (but interact). Mind is a kind.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 12 Minds and bodies #1 (Descartes) By David Kelsey.
He did just about everything. Everything that’s important anyway.
© Michael Lacewing Substance and Property Dualism Michael Lacewing
Substance dualism Michael Lacewing co.uk.
Descartes’ Interactionist Dualism. Overview Descartes’ general project Descartes’ general project Argument for dualism Argument for dualism Explanation.
Chapter 5: Mind and Body The Rejection of Dualism
Substance dualism Michael Lacewing
Philosophy of Mind: Theories of self / personal identity: REVISION Body & Soul - what makes you you?
Descartes on the mind Michael Lacewing co.uk.
 The value of certainty.  Foundationalists suppose that true beliefs held with certainty (indubitable) together with logical and linguistic analysis.
Descartes' Meditations : Introduction to Philosophy June 4, 2009 Instructor: Karin Howe Carnegie Mellon University.
The argument for the existence of bodies (Meditation 6) 1.Nature provided me with a strong propensity to believe there are bodies. 2.The only way I could.
Rene Descartes ( ) The Father of Modern Philosophy
René Descartes (1596–1650) Cartesian Substance Dualism.
COGITO ERGO SUM.
The Mind And Body Problem Mr. DeZilva.  Humans are characterised by the body (physical) and the mind (consciousness) These are the fundamental properties.
René Descartes Brandon Lee Block D.
Chapter 3: Knowledge The Rationalist’s Confidence: Descartes Introducing Philosophy, 10th edition Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen Higgins, and Clancy Martin.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
Rene Descartes The Father of Modern Philosophy
WEEK 4: EPISTEMOLOGY Introduction to Rationalism.
Substance and Property Dualism Quick task: Fill in the gaps activity Quick task: Fill in the gaps activity ?v=sT41wRA67PA.

Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Dualism LO: Consider the concept of dualism
LIFE AFTER DEATH 1 HOW CAN WE SURVIVE DEATH?
Intuition and deduction thesis (rationalism)
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Minds and Bodies.
Descartes, Meditations 1 and 2
The view that mind and body are distinct and separate entities.
What is the relationship between body and soul.
Describing Mental States
Are the body and soul inseparable, only intended to intervene?
Michael Lacewing Descartes on the mind Michael Lacewing
The Mind Body Problem Our minds seem to be non-physical and different from our bodies. Our bodies seem to be something different from our minds. Are they.
On your whiteboard: What is empiricism? Arguments/evidence for it?
Get Yourself Thinking…
Think, pair, Share Is this the same person?.
Rene Descartes Father of Modern Philosophy b. March in La Haye France wrote Meditations in 1641 d. February
Rene Descartes Father of Modern Philosophy
Michael Lacewing Descartes on the mind Michael Lacewing
Presentation transcript:

Lesson 4: Descartes; a dualist view Make a list of everything that makes up ‘you’ What could you get rid of and still be ‘you’?

Rene Descartes: biography Rene Descartes was born in 1596 in France. He studied under Jesuit priests. He studied Aristotelian physics and maths. He was fascinated with proving his ideas with REASON. He wrote The Meditations on First Philosophy in 1641. We have met some of ideas before…. But what did he think about the body and soul?

Complete the table Descartes started from a position of Philosophical doubt. Column B represents ordinary, every day doubt, Column C represents philosophical doubt. Hopefully, for every tick in column B you also have a tick in column C. However the reverse is not true. For Descartes, this was an academic exercise. He wanted to use scepticism to help him understand what he could be certain of.

The Cogito ‘cogito ergo sum’ What does this mean? Through a process of elimination, Descartes decides that the only thing that he cannot doubt is: ‘cogito ergo sum’ I think therefore I am. What does this mean? What is the ‘I’ that Descartes is referring to?

Body and Mind Descartes makes distinctions between things that are mind and things that are the body. Examples are: Can be known a priori Can be known a posteriori Dubitable Indubitable Unextended Takes up space Indivisible Divisible Takes up no space Extended

Relationship between mind and body They are independent substances. They can exist apart and will be separated at death. In this life they exist in causal interaction with one another. The body and mind communicate with each other via a small organ in the centre of the brain called the pineal gland Although distinct substances, the mind and body are in intimate union. Discuss…

Gilbert Ryle Gilbert Ryle (1900 – 1976) famously criticised Descartes. He described Descartes’ model as ‘the ghost in the machine. He used two different examples to highlight Descartes mistake:

Cambridge University Descertes is making a "Category-mistake.”   A foreigner visiting Cambridge for the first time is shown a number of colleges, libraries, playing fields, museums, scientific departments and administrative offices. He then asks "But where is the university? I have seen where the members of the Colleges live, where the Registrar works, where the scientists experiment and the rest. But I have not yet seen the University in which reside and work the members of your University." It has then to be explained to him that the University is not another collateral institution, some ulterior counterpart to the colleges, laboratories and offices which he has seen. The University is just the way in which all that he has already seen is organized. ....

Gloves Similarly, one may say that he bought a left-hand glove and a right-hand glove, but not that he bought a left-hand glove, a right-hand glove and a pair of gloves. Ryle was a monist. He argued for philosophical behaviourism. He saw all supposed ‘mental’ events as really a way of referring to complex patterns of behaviour.

Draw and Label 2 men: Descartes and Ryle Annotate them both with what they believe about the body and soul. Then annotate them further with the strengths and weaknesses of their ideas.

Strengths and Weaknesses It seems as though my mind is more than my brain. Mental and Physical realms have different properties. There is no place in the brain where electric simulation can cause a person to believe or decide. Life after death may be possible. Brain damage caused by trauma or disease compromises our mental power.

Questions to consider If you side with Ryle What then, is humanity? Where do we get ideas of Justice, truth and love from? If you are a materialist, you cannot be a dualist or believe in rebirth, but you could believe in bodily resurrection. Can you explain why?