The Thoughts Of Gilbert Ryle's The Concept Of Mind

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Rene Descartes was a French Philosopher who wrote the book, Meditations on First Philosophy. There are six meditations, the last one is named, The essence of material things, and the real distinction between mind and body, in the sixth meditation. In the previous meditations he already conjectured that he had a mind because he is a thing that thinks and to think is to have a mind and to think is to also exist. Descartes believes that physical things exist because they are pure mathematics, and he can see them clearly and distinctly. He then creates two arguments about the existence of material things. The first argument is based on the imagination and it 's abilities, the second is based on the body 's sensations.
To Descartes there is a …show more content…

A category mistake is when someone puts something in one category when it actually belongs in another. An example Ryle uses is a man getting a tour of a university and seeing all the separate buildings, faculty, and students that make up the university but he makes a mistake and thinks that the university is a single object. Ryle 's believes that Descartes made same mistake and assumed the mind was a single concept when it was actually many components of mental states. He recognizes that mind and matter(body) are in separate categories of mental and physical states. They can 't be measured the same because the mind has infinite possibilities while matter doesn 't. Ryle argues that dualism has given itself a weakness when defining the mind as separate from the body allowing for a misunderstanding of what the mind really is. He simply rejects dualism because he believes that it doesn 't have an absolute language to describe nonphysical entities like the mind or consciousness. According to Ryle 's argument the mind is invisible and exist outside of the physical world while the body is visible and exist in the physical world and a person was a combination of the two. He believes that bodies are matter and are in a space governed by natural laws while the mind isn

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