Comparing Darwin's Monism And Cartesian Dualism

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Cartesian Dualism vs Darwin Monism
Today, I am going to argue for Descartes mind-body dualism against Darwin’s monism. I believe there is no ultimate answer for the argument. However, based on today’s science and evidence. Detailed scientific studies allow us to have a better understanding of ourselves, and scientists are confident enough to persuade people to believe in facts rather than in beliefs. René Descartes believed that the mind and body are separate. The belief that we are not physical or material “things”. On the one hand, the physical part e.g. brain are the “body” which can be measured in time and space, on the other hand, the mind part e.g. Soul cannot. Descartes claim that we, as humans, are able to think about …show more content…

The mental life and the mental experience is actually physiology, the behavior across the natural world was sculpted and shape by the environmental pressure and laws. Since the process is logical and every aspect of evolution were based on an algorithm, which does not require a creator. We were like Artificial Intelligence (A.I); there is no existence of “free will”. We though we are doing what we want to do, however, the fact is we been programmed bases on our environment, and how we act were based on the behavior that we learn but not what we want …show more content…

However, there is no researchers or method to either prove or disprove the existence of “God”. Descartes argues that the mind and soul cannot be measure in science; the mindless mechanistic “coincidences” is the direct results of God’s work. To conclude, the argument is all about faith and beliefs. There is no doubt that science contradicts religion, even some greatest scientists of the world have declared that there is some invisible power that we cannot explain through science. Yet, I believe that we should consider evidence that we have in order to examine the reality and “truth”. Our experiences of everyday life, the time that passed, the behaviors that we observe, were far more convincing than something that bases on a vague

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