Repository | Book | Chapter
Mind, machine, sensation
pp. 122-152
Abstract
Descartes, we saw, thought that he had managed to explain not only movement, breathing, digestion and other processes mechanically, by corpuscularian-hydraulic means, but also mental features such as memory and imagination, and even character traits and moods. And all these, according to him, do not involve any immaterial soul. Why, then, does he ascribe such a soul or mind to man? Why isn't Descartes' man just a biological machine?
Publication details
Published in:
Ben-Yami Hanoch (2015) Descartes' philosophical revolution: a reassessment. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 122-152
Full citation:
Ben-Yami Hanoch (2015) Mind, machine, sensation, In: Descartes' philosophical revolution, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 122–152.