The unity of Descartes's thought
Title | The unity of Descartes's thought |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Authors | Farkas, K. |
Journal title | History of Philosophy Quarterly |
Year | 2005 |
Pages | 17 - 30 |
Volume | 22 |
Issue | 1 |
Abstract | Dualism--that the world divides to the mental and the corporeal--is a central tenet in Descartes's philosophy. It is therefore puzzling that Descartes sometimes suggests that certain phenomena--including perceptions, sensations, emotions, called the 'special modes'--belong to neither mind nor body alone, but specifically to the union of the two. It has been suggested that accordingly, we should regard Descartes as a 'trialist' rather than a dualist. I criticize the 'trialist' interpretation, and offer an explanation of the theory of the special modes which reveals it to be perfectly compatible with Descartes's dualism. |
Language | English |
Notes | exported from refbase (http://www.bibliography.ceu.hu/show.php?record=4455), last updated on Wed, 08 Jul 2009 13:58:23 +0200 |