If we are to stick
to Leibniz’s Law in being the deciding factor between Cartesian Dualism and JJC
Smart’s ‘identity theory’, we must first understand why this law is true or
not. It says that two different things cannot have the exact same properties and still
be two different things. They could be entirely identical (like two cars of
the same model fresh off the assembly line), however, they would not have the
same spatial location. Thus, one property remains different from the two
similar objects. However, if two things have different properties but are still considered to be the same thing,
only under a different condition, then we must include that condition as a
different property; thus two things. I believe Leibniz’s Law to be the turning
point in this argument because both philosophers are attempting to support or
dispute it in a way. It is also a great place to start because its logic is
easy to understand.
Descartes argues
that the mind is separate from the body because the two have different
properties. His thinking is simple.
Since the body is divisible, and the mind is indivisible, the mind has a
property that the body does not. Therefore, according to Leibniz’s Law, the
mind is separate from the body.
Smart’s
case relies on proving brain processes and mental sensations are one in the
same thing. The key to understanding this is the mind/body connection. If what
happens to your body is so finely connected to the feelings of your surroundings, then your mind and body cannot be separate from themselves. However,
according to Leibniz’s law, if we can distinguish two different things as
having different properties, then they cannot be the same thing. A brain
process is the nerval connection in the body that results in the actual feeling
of a sensation. A mental state would be the feeling of the sensation itself
like a pain in your arm or hearing a concerto. If I am able to distinguish the
two in such a way, it wouldn’t seem that they would be the same thing. In other
words, if his argument is that brain processes and mental sensations are the
same thing, then how can anyone use
the term in its own definition? A brain process is what results in a mental
sensation. It is a proven fact that it takes a certain amount of time for any
brain process to actually reach the brain. Smart counters by saying a young boy
and the same boy, only older (The General), have different properties but are
still the same person. The only thing that changes is their temporal property. So
what can we consider his identity if his mind and body undergo dramatic changes
throughout his lifetime?
Descartes’
argument centers on the sensation of touch. He says that the connection from
the foot to the brain, with regards to the nervous system, is deceitful. One
may have a pain in one’s foot but it may not be because one’s foot is actually
experiencing physical stimulation. It could be from stimulation in another
place along the nerval connection (say the spine) that causes one to experience
a sensation somewhere else. Another way to argue this would be to take
Descartes’ separation of the body example quite literally by severing a bodily
appendage. Why would we have a mental sensation of an itch on an arm that
doesn’t exist? But one could argue that it only proves the mind is more
connected to the body because it has a conception of itself that is no longer
there. I would say that if the brain were so in tune with its body, it would
understand the fact that its limb is no longer there.
Smart handles his
discussion primarily from the sensation of sight. Or rather one of the
anomalies that comes along with sight. He begins by using color, an adjective
commonly used to describe something physical, to describe something
non-physical, a yellowish-orange after image. By doing this, he attempts to say
that the mental sensation of seeing the after image is the same as having the
brain process of seeing an actual thing. And since we cannot describe such a
mental sensation other than by means of something physical, then it must be a
physical thing that has physical properties.
The power of his
argument, comes from his use of color and how it’s used to describe purely
physical things. My objection to this is that Smart describes it as being
“yellowish-orange,” but I may come to describe it as being blue, red, yellow,
and orange at the same time. How is it possible for something that is physical
to have all of these properties at the same time? Also, the experience of
seeing the after image is not exactly like an experience of seeing something
physical. After a while of staring at the after image, it will eventually
disappear. It also remains visible (even more so) when I close my eyes, which
is a property that no physical thing (other than the back of my eyelids) has.
So if I can say that the after image has at least one property that physical
things do not, then we can conclude that the after image is not the same as
seeing a physical thing, even if it is a noun.
Descartes reasons
that physical things have physical properties such as having a spatial
location, having size, having shape, having weight, being subject to the laws
of physics, and being directly observable. Mental things primarily have
unphysical characteristics such as having no location, no size, no extension,
no weight, they are not subject to the laws of physics and are not directly
observable (although apparently everyone has a ‘tell’). He says that the mind
and body are connected as a singular unit, but since the mind has a property
that the body does not, it must be
distinct from the body.
The
substance of Smart’s argument is much like saying you cannot have music without
a particular dynamic describing the volume at which it is played. It is easy to
imagine a piece of music without any dynamics written in, however, it is
impossible to actually the play music without playing it at a particular level.
The dynamics construct the emotions (or the feelings) of the piece while the
music provides the layout for which it is played. Descartes would say that they
are two different things with different properties that coincide with one
another in synchronicity. The sheet of music is a physical thing that contains
dynamic markings (physical markings that are related to the abstract). However,
Smart would argue that you cannot have music without the dynamics. You cannot
express a dynamic without playing a note that expresses it. It would be foolish
to think that one could play a concerto, silently. But having now brought up
this analogy, it seems I have only proven that the body cannot exist without
the mind, which we know not to be true (a dead body exists and does not have a
working mind). Or maybe I should rather say that a singular body can exist but
we can only consider it a person if there is a working mind behind it.
However,
it would also appear that I am excluding the idea of spatial temporal identity.
Smart would argue that water and ice are composed of the same thing, but the
density of ice is different from that of water. Therefore, ice has a different property
from water even though it is composed of the same elements. This seems to
disprove Leibniz’ Law in a kind of way. Obviously the argument still holds that
the spatial identity between a glass of ice and an ice cube remain different.
However, the characteristic of ice is also a property of water. It freezes when
under the right conditions. It is similar to Smart’s ‘General’ argument. The
boy and the General are the same person with different characteristics, but
only if we examine them outside of their spatial temporal locations. The ice is
different from water, but if we give the ice time to melt, it will eventually
become water. But still what does that say about the identity of a person over
time? Well what is it that changes the General from the young boy he once was?
It’s the experiences he has and the memories he maintains of himself growing as
an individual through time. Water has other properties, but they will only come
into being under the right circumstances.
The
point of arguing all of this is to ultimately determine whether or not the soul
continues to exist after bodily death. It is a question that reaches at the
core of human existence. Is there a point of living if we are nothing but
physical beings that have no way of interacting with anything outside of this
physical realm? According to Occam’s Razor, we should remain loyal to the
hypothesis that leaves the most variables out of the final product. In which
case, it would seem that Smart’s hypothesis is the simplest because it doesn’t require
further questioning outside of our realm of knowledge. However, Smart’s theory
does appear to violate Leibniz’ Law.
For
the question of immortality, I would say that it depends on what degree of
immortality we are addressing. Escaping bodily death would seem impossible
according to the laws of thermodynamics (entropy). However, if we would like to
appease to the fans of Occam’s Razor, then we cannot assume anything that we
cannot possibly know to be true. That being said, there are some people who have escaped death. So long as the
human race continues as it should, their stories will continue to live on
through books, music, folk tales, movies, etc. Achilles may not be around
anymore, but we still know the story of his battle against Troy and his quest
to be remembered.
Essentially,
what I am trying to say is that I believe everyone has two identities. However,
I’m not exactly siding with the Cartesian Dualist. I’m rather siding with
Occam’s Razor. For now, it is no longer a question of the soul after death or
whether God exists. As far as we know, living human beings are the only things
that are capable of raising the questions of identity, the soul, and life after
death. Even if our souls did continue to exist after death, it would only be
the souls of the living that will persist to care about you and vice versa. Your
living identity (bodily identity) is how you’re perceived by the world around
you. Your lasting identity (post-mortem) is measured by the impact you made on
the world while you were still alive. Is it possible that one could exist and
not be perceived at all? Yes. Is it also possible that one could live their whole
lives without having an impact? Of course. But it would also seem possible that
these people wouldn’t have an
identity as far as we’re concerned. If a tree falls in the woods, but nothing
is around to hear it, does it still make a sound? My answer is no. Your
identity is dependant on you.
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