Mental Substance

Mental substance can refer to the concept held by dualists and idealists, that minds are made-up of non-physical substance. This is opposed to the materialists, who hold that what we normally think of as mental substance is ultimately physical matter (i.e., brains). Descartes, who was most famous for the assertion "I think therefore I am," has had a lot of influence on the mind-body problem. He used a more precise definition of the word "substance" than is currently popular: that a substance is something which can exist without the existence of any other substance. For many philosophers, this word or the phrase "mental substance" has a special meaning. Gottfried Leibniz, belonging to the generation immediately after Descartes, held the position that the mental world was built up by monads, mental objects that are not part of the physical world.

See also

*Monad

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
decipher, inc.
test card f
carmen kass
racak
list of irish poets
cingulate sulcus
social cost
media gateway
rosenborg
wood anemone
evelyn hooker
mammatus
workshop
lcd projector
so miguel island
osd
cyaxares
corvo island
george adams
the models
1828 in science
1829 in science
fibrate
propositional attitude
milo minderbinder
a wish for wings
david baker
dhimotiki
geoffrey squires
jules desnoyers
third stream jazz
matt kenseth
brithenig
output standards
branchville
british movement
lauderdale
pearl incident
maurice scully
riverview, florida
nurse assistant skills
riverview, missouri
hardware abstraction layer
art theft