T
TruthVsComfort
Guest
What do you believe?
(Cartesian)Dualism: The belief that our body and mind exists independently as two mutually irreducible entities. This lends to the possibility of our mind persisting even after the body dies. The mind acts upon the body and body on mind, as both mental and physical events are necessary for behavior to emerge (Corsini, 1999, p141).
Materialism: The belief that regards matter and its motions as constituting the universe, and all phenomena, including that of the mind, as due to material agents. This does not lend to the possibility of our mind persisting at the event of bodily death. It suggests that only physical events are necessary for behavior to emerge (Corsini, 1999, p727).
Mentalism: The belief that accepts mental qualities as causal realities, but at the same time denies that they can exist separately in an unembodied state apart from the functioning brain. Both mind and body act upon the other in a reciprocal fashion for behavior to emerge. Differs from Materialism in that it insists that the consciousness is determinant over the brains physical interactions. Differs from Dualism in that it denies consciousness persisting independent of the brain (Sperry, 1980).
(Cartesian)Dualism: The belief that our body and mind exists independently as two mutually irreducible entities. This lends to the possibility of our mind persisting even after the body dies. The mind acts upon the body and body on mind, as both mental and physical events are necessary for behavior to emerge (Corsini, 1999, p141).
Materialism: The belief that regards matter and its motions as constituting the universe, and all phenomena, including that of the mind, as due to material agents. This does not lend to the possibility of our mind persisting at the event of bodily death. It suggests that only physical events are necessary for behavior to emerge (Corsini, 1999, p727).
Mentalism: The belief that accepts mental qualities as causal realities, but at the same time denies that they can exist separately in an unembodied state apart from the functioning brain. Both mind and body act upon the other in a reciprocal fashion for behavior to emerge. Differs from Materialism in that it insists that the consciousness is determinant over the brains physical interactions. Differs from Dualism in that it denies consciousness persisting independent of the brain (Sperry, 1980).