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René Descartes 'The Conceivability Argument'

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Student Number: 250814252
TA/Professor: Tracy de Boer/Genoveva Marti
Philosophy 1020
March 17th 2015
The Conceivability Argument
Introduction:
Substance Dualism is the idea that the mind and body are distinct from one another. It argues that the world consists of two independent substances, the mental and the material, each with its own unique and defining characteristics. René Descartes, a French Philosopher, first introduced The Conceivability Argument for dualism in his Sixth Meditation hundreds of years ago and it has been criticized ever since. In this argument he proposes that the mind and the body are separate substances with independent existence because he can conceive of his mind existing in a universe that consists of no material things. In this paper, I will argue that even though Descartes argument is valid, it’s not sound due to the strength of objections that arise from the weaknesses in its structure.
Argument: …show more content…

Hume’s law states that if we can conceive of something then it is logically possible. Leibniz’s law on the other hand says that if X has a property that Y lacks, X and Y are different. Descartes starts the argument by stating that as a thinking thing, he can conceive existing without a physical extended body. Due to Hume’s law, anything that he can conceive of is therefore logically possible. Using Leibniz’s law, if it is logically possible that X (mind) exists without Y (body), then X (mind) is not identical to Y (body). In conclusion, Descartes states that as a person with a mind he is not identical to his physical

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