Introduction: internalism and externalism

According to the Cartesian conception, minds are to be assimilated to the category of substance. Cartesian dualism has been famously ridiculed as the myth of the ghost in the machine. And it was Rene Descartes's decision to make the mind ghostly, that is, non-physical that has drawn the princip...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inExternalism pp. 1 - 6
Main Author Rowlands, Mark
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published United Kingdom Routledge 2003
Taylor & Francis Group
Edition1
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISBN9781902683782
1902683773
9781902683775
1902683781
DOI10.4324/9781315710556-2

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Summary:According to the Cartesian conception, minds are to be assimilated to the category of substance. Cartesian dualism has been famously ridiculed as the myth of the ghost in the machine. And it was Rene Descartes's decision to make the mind ghostly, that is, non-physical that has drawn the principal fire from dissenters. The Cartesian conception of the mind results from the combination of the Location Claim and the Possession Claim. Descartes's dualism and his internalism have, arguably, the same root: the rise of mechanism associated with the scientific revolution. In recent decades, perhaps the most popular way of developing the idea of materialism is known as functionalism. The most obvious form of Cartesian materialism is what is known as the mind-brain identity theory. This, roughly, is the view that the mind is the brain. Another common way of developing or explaining the idea of materialism is in terms of the concept of supervenience.
ISBN:9781902683782
1902683773
9781902683775
1902683781
DOI:10.4324/9781315710556-2