divided up into different faculties; thought, emotion, volition, perception a — Janus
:up:Mind isn't just one thing, it's more like an umbrella term [ ... ] — jorndoe
Neither. IMO, a mind is an embodied, metacognitive process constituted by a system of hierarchically tangled (D. Hofstadter, T. Metzinger) cognitive functions.Is the mind a single thing, or does it have parts? — TiredThinker
Like a running river, I don't think a mind has discrete "parts".If it has parts, what are they?
No. Just as choreographed dance-steps are not "tied to parts of" legs ..., mind(ing) is what a sufficiently complex brain do enacted by its (developmental) environment.Are itspartstied to parts of the brain?
If the mind is a thing then it occupies a space. Or are there things that do not occupy a space? — Daniel
Is the mind a single thing, or does it have parts? If it has parts, what are they? Are its parts tied to parts of the brain? — TiredThinker
Where in that book does Ryle present a single argument against the idea that the mind is a single, indivisible, thing? — Bartricks
IMV, good philosophers often try to show us that our questions were ill-conceived in the first place. — Pie
It also makes more sense to me that metaphysicians should have to argue for their positive claims. — Pie
Where is there any evidence that questions about the mind are of this sort? — Bartricks
You either think there's reason to think that's true, or you think there's no reason to think that's true but you think it anyway.
If you think there's reason to think that's true, then you accept the authority of reason. Which is just as well, for all philosophy involves appealing to reason. — Bartricks
Now, our reason represents our minds to exist and to be indivisible things. — Bartricks
That's evidence that that's precisely what they are.
— Bartricks
Allow me to recommend The Concept of Mind by Gilbert Ryle. — Pie
For Ryle, when we talk about a person’s mind, we are talking about a person’s abilities to perform certain kinds of tasks. Hence words that refer to mental states, such as “know”, and “believe” refer to a person’s dispositions to behave in certain ways, given certain circumstances.
Excellent book. The beginnings of clear thinking about mind. The Official Doctrine might well be sitting behind ↪TiredThinker
's OP. — Banno
Is the mind a single thing, or does it have parts? If it has parts, what are they? Are its parts tied to parts of the brain? — TiredThinker
Allow me to recommend The Concept of Mind by Gilbert Ryle. I only recently got around to this book, and it's just flamethrower for so many entrenched confusions concerning the mind. — Pie
The mind is a thing.
Thoughts are states of mind. They're not things . They're states.
Likewise, consciousness is a 'state'.
States are always of things.
The things that conscious states are states of are called 'minds'.
There's a big philosophical question over what kind of a thing a mind is.
But it is a thing. — Bartricks
You haven't actually read Ryle have you? — Bartricks
Now, present an argument for the materiality of the mind. You are about to be taken to school — Bartricks
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.