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    Sensation requires passivity, but the mind is purely active. — Carmelics
    Home/Perception
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    Challenges→Descartes is wrong that the mind can sense.

    Sensation requires passivity, but the mind is purely active.

    Consciousness & MindPerception
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    PerceptionConsciousness & Mind

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    Descartes is wrong that the mind can sense.For the mind to sense, the immaterial mind would have to passively receive senso...The immaterial mind cannot interact with material things.

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    The mind is purely active and therefore cannot be the seat of sensatio...83%The intellect's passivity is categorically different from matter's pas...81%Both thinking and thought are simultaneously active and passive.81%Therefore neither thinking nor thought occupies a purely active or pur...80%

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    SEP: continental-rationalism
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    Another line of discussion that relates to the problem of dualism and the nature of ideas is advanced in 1734 by Ghanaian philosopher Anton Amo. An extraordinarily interesting thinker in his own right, Amo advances a critique of Descartes’s assertion that the mind can sense, that is, that the immaterial mind can passively receive sensory information. In his dissertation, On the Apatheia of the Human Mind, or The Absence of Sensation and the Faculty of Sense in the Human Mind and Their Presence i

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