Author Rozemond, Marleen.

Title Descartes's dualism / Marleen Rozemond.

Imprint Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1998.
Location Call Number Status
 Monograph Collection  B1878.M55 R69 1998  AVAILABLE
Description xviii, 279 pages ; 24 cm
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Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 265-273) and index.
Contents 1. The Real Distinction Argument -- 2. Scholasticism, Mechanism, and the Incorporeity of the Mind -- 3. Sensible Qualities -- 4. Real Qualities and Substantial Forms -- 5. Hylomorphism and the Unity of the Human Being -- 6. Sensation and the Union of Mind and Body.
Summary Marleen Rozemond explicates Descartes's aim to provide a metaphysics that would accommodate mechanistic science and supplant scholasticism. Her approach includes discussion of central differences from and similarities with the scholastics and how these discriminations affected Descartes's defense of the incorporeity of the mind and the mechanistic conception of body. Confronting the question of how, in his view, mind and body are united, she examines his defense of this union on the basis of sensation. In the course of her argument, she focuses on a few of the scholastics to whom Descartes referred in his own writings: Thomas Aquinas, Francisco Suarez, Eustachius of St. Paul, and the Jesuits of Coimbra.
Subject(s) Descartes, René, 1596-1650.
Dualism -- History.
Metaphysics -- History.
ISBN/ISSN 9780674009684