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  1. The unity of Descartes's man.Paul Hoffman - 1986 - Philosophical Review 95 (3):339-370.
    ne of the leading problems for Cartesian dualism is to provide an account of the union of mind and body. This problem is often construed to be one of explaining how thinking things and extended things can causally interact. That is, it needs to be explained how thoughts in the mind can produce motions in the body and how motions in the body can produce sensations, appetites, and emotions in the mind. The conclusion often drawn, as it was by three (...)
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  • Descartes’s Dualism.Marleen Rozemond - 1998 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    In her first book, Marleen Rozemond explicates Descartes's aim to provide a metaphysics that would accommodate mechanistic science and supplant scholasticism.
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  • (1 other version)The Method of Descartes.L. J. Beck - 1954 - Philosophical Review 63 (2):272-273.
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  • Le système de Descartes.O. Hamelin, L. Robin & Émile Durkheim - 1911 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 19 (1):1-2.
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  • Sur l’ontologie grise de Descartes.J.-L. Marion - unknown
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  • The Faces of Simplicity in Descartes’s Soul.Marleen Rozemond - 2014 - In K. Corcilius, D. Perler & C. Helmig (eds.), The Parts of the Soul. De Gruyter. pp. 219-244.
    In this paper I explain several ways in which Descartes denied that the human soul or mind is composite and the role this idea played in his thought. The mind is whole in the whole and whole in the parts of the body because it has no parts. Unlike body, the mind is indivisible, and this is a different idea from the thought that mind and body are incorruptible. Descartes connects the immortality of the soul with its status as a (...)
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  • Life’s Form: Late Aristotelian Conceptions of the Soul.Dennis des Chene - 2002 - Philosophical Quarterly 52 (208):390-392.
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