Essay On The Meditations By Descartes

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Our mind and our body are undoubtedly separate from each other. A mind can survive without a body, and, likewise, a body is just house for the mind. In The Meditations, Descartes describes this concept in his dualist theory in the second of multiple Meditations. We can reach this conclusion by first understanding that the mind can survive any destruction of the body, and then realizing that you are identical to your mind and not your body. In other words, you are your thoughts and experiences – not your physical body. Finally, you cannot doubt your own existence, because the act of doubting is, itself, and act of thinking, and to think is to exist as a “thinking thing,” or Res Cogitans.
The first step in rationalizing that your mind is separate from your body is to understand that you exist; that you are real. To prove that you actually exist, you must first entertain the thought “I don’t exist.” Since you are entertaining your thought, it’s real; therefore, if you’re thinking a real thought, you are real, too. There’s no way to doubt something, because the act of doubting makes you a doubter, which in turn makes you real. In the same way that thinking makes you a thinker. This is also known as Descartes famous dictum “logito ergo sum” or “I think, therefore, I am.” This suggests that we are “thinking things” or what Descartes refers to as “Res Cogitans.” Hence, you are your mind and not your body, and you can certainly exist without your body.
Here’s a way to visualize this concept of existing: suppose that everything you think you know about the physical world is false. Instead, there is an evil genius who is

unimaginably powerful, and whose sole purpose is to succeed in preventing you from having any beliefs. In other words...

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... Theory is instrumental in explaining how the mind can be considered an entity that is separate from the body. We can come to this conclusion by first understanding that we are real, and we cannot logically doubt our own presence, because the act of doubting is thinking, which makes you a thinker. Next, we realize that the mind, and all of its experiences and thoughts, will remain the same no matter what changes or destruction that’s endured by the body. Then we can grasp that we are our minds and not our physical bodies. We can use a number of examples to illustrate that these concepts, including the movie The Matrix. Finally, we can disapprove John Locke’s objections to the Dualist Theory by identifying that the mind is capable of conscious and unconscious thought; therefore, it cannot be divisible like the body. Hence the mind is a separate entity from the body.

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