dualismen
Dualismen is the view that reality consists of two fundamental kinds of substances or aspects. In the philosophy of mind, it is most often understood as substance dualism: the mind and the body are two distinct kinds of substance—mental and physical. The mind is associated with thoughts, feelings, and intentional states, while the body is extended in space and governed by physical laws. The core claim is that mental phenomena cannot be fully reduced to physical processes.
The most influential form is Cartesian dualism, named after René Descartes. Descartes argued that mind and
Beyond substance dualism, philosophers distinguish other dualist positions. Property dualism holds that there are two kinds
Critiques focus on the interaction problem: how can a non-physical mind causally affect a physical body? Developments