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23 - Soul and mind: life and thought in the seventeenth century

from V - Spirit

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Daniel Garber
Affiliation:
University of Chicago
Michael Ayers
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

Philosophers certainly worried about the problems of mind and soul – what differentiates humans from dogs, dogs from trees, and trees from stones – long before 1600. But in this essay I shall try to emphasise the seventeenth-century contribution to the question – in particular, the way in which the new mechanical philosophy suggested both new problems and. new solutions to old problems connected with life and thought. Following some historical background, we shall discuss various views concerning the soul and the existence and nature of the incorporeal substance that most seventeenth-century thinkers posited. The essay will end with a brief discussion of some of the reactions to the mainstream accounts of mind and soul.

BACKGROUND

It is impossible to give an adequate view of the historical setting of seventeenth-century accounts of mind and soul in a few pages. But a brief sketch can at least serve to indicate something of the background against which seventeenth-century philosophers worked in formulating their conceptions of soul, mind, and the like.

The history of the concept of the soul in the years that immediately preceded the seventeenth century is extremely complex. In addition to the Aristotelianism that continued to dominate the schools, there were significantly different traditions of thought on the question, including Platonic, Hermetic, and Paracelsian views, not to mention the views within the medical tradition; the full history of the question, integrating all these perspectives, has yet to be written. Elements of these traditions will find their way into the accounts of seventeenth-century figures provided later in this chapter.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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References

Glanvill, JosephSaducismus Triumphatus, or Full and Plain Evidence Concerning Witches and Apparitions, Glanvill, 1689.Google Scholar
More, and Hobbes, It is not part here, to oppose Theists, but Atheists: wherefore we shall leave these Two Sorts of Incorporealists to dispute it out friendly amongst themselves’ (Cudworth 1678).Google Scholar

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