Mind, Freedom and Knowledge
Descartes argued that that all humans had both a body and mind, and that the mind was eternal while the body was subject to physical and material laws. The universe was divided between the mind and matter, and the physical world could be explained by mathematical and scientific laws. Hobbes, Locke and other political and philosophical theorists of the 17th Century were also influenced by the new scientific thought of Descartes, Galileo and William Harvey to one degree or another, and had to incorporate them into philosophy (Ryle, p. 251). Ryle denied that any "ghost in the machine" existed, of that the immortal soul somehow operated the physical body. He admitted that explaining the link between bodies and minds was very difficult, although behaviorists had come to understand that expressions indicate moods and emotions, while vision, hearing and motion are all based on sensory inputs being received by the mind, but no one could actually measure and observe mental processes at the time Ryle was writing in 1949 (Ryle, p. 252). When people are described as knowing, believing, hoping or intending, these verbs certainly refer to internal mental processes, and from these philosophers constructed their theories of the mind. Ryle denies the existence of an eternal soul or mind separate from the body, even though he also concedes that "thinking, feeling, and purposive doing cannot be described solely in the idioms of physics, chemistry, and physiology" (Ryle, p. 255). Bodies and minds were part of a single whole, just as much as a college or department were all part of a university, even though the mind was a very special organ or machine that was like an internal motor within the body, it could still be understood by physical laws like cause and effect.
2) Ryle did not regard the mind as purely mechanical device, but as a complex organ that operated on the basis of cause and effect. If the mind was not a ghost or ethereal entity operating a body, it was more a kind of internal-governing motor of the body whose laws of operation were mostly unknown. These laws need not be purely deterministic, however, and Ryle rejected both idealism and materialism because they made an artificial distinction between the mind and body (Ryle, p. 257). Armstrong assumes that no better theory of the mind exists than the materialist or physicalist one, in which "man is nothing but a physic-chemical mechanism" (Armstrong, p. 259). Science cannot prove the existence of God or the immortal soul, but it offers "the best clue we have to the nature of man" even though that knowledge is a patchwork and far from complete (Armstrong, p. 260). Ryle attacked Descartes for arguing that the mind was a spiritual substance, and instead advocated behaviorism as an explanation for all mental processes (Armstrong, p. 260). For Armstrong, Ryle's behaviorism is not a satisfactory theory of the mind or consciousness, and speech and thoughts are not necessarily synonymous with behavior, but rather thought lies behind behavior (Armstrong, p. 261). Of course Armstrong is a materialist and as much of an opponent of dualism as Ryle, but his view of the mind seems more elusive and he regards it difficult to comprehend, at least with present-day scientific knowledge.
3) Armstrong argues that the mind is a complex physical-chemical organ and "stands behind and brings about our complex behavior," which is the product of certain mental states (Armstrong, p. 263). Human beings are undoubtedly conscious and have experiences, and these are not simply related to behavior (Armstrong, p. 264). Consciousness is an internal state, but also a physical state on the central nervous system, and concerns "simply the scanning of one part of our central nervous system by another" (Armstrong, p. 266). Nagel notes that science already has an excellent understanding about the physical functions of the human organism, including its anatomy and physiology, and intelligent bats and aliens might learn even more, even though they would have little basis for comprehending purely subjective and internal mental experiences in the human mind (Nagel, p. 314). Nagel finds it difficult to understand the "objective character of an experience apart from the particular point-of-view from which its subject apprehends it" (Nagel, p. 315). No one could comprehend the experience of a bat unless they could see the world from a bat's point-of-view. Physicalism has a clear meaning in that "mental states are states of the body; mental events are physical events"...
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