Descartes’s Conception of Mind Through the Prism of Imagination: Cartesian Substance Dualism Questioned

Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie:146-171 (2018)
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Abstract

The aim of this article is to clarify an aspect of Descartes’s conception of mind that seriously impacts on the standard objections against Cartesian dualism. By a close reading of Descartes’s writings on imagination, I argue that the capacity to imagine does not inhere as a mode in the mind itself, but only in the embodied mind, that is, a mind that is not united to the body does not possess the faculty to imagine. As a mode considered as a general property, and not as an instance of it, belongs to the essence of the substance, and as imagination (like sensation) arises from the mind-body union, then the problem arises of knowing to what extent a Cartesian embodied mind is separable from the body.

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Lynda Gaudemard
Aix-Marseille University

Citations of this work

Imagination and Passions in Descartes and Hobbes.Guido Frilli - 2020 - Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 48:193-225.

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References found in this work

Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings.David John Chalmers (ed.) - 2002 - New York: Oxford University Press USA.
The Causal Closure of the Physical and Naturalism.David Papineau - 2007 - In Brian P. McLaughlin, Ansgar Beckermann & Sven Walter (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy of mind. New York: Oxford University Press.

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