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    The conceivability argument creates a prima facie case ag... — Carmelics
    Home/Modality & Possibility
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    Supports→The mind has no more than causal ontological dependence on the body (not logical or analytic dependence).

    The conceivability argument creates a prima facie case against stronger forms of mind-body dependence.

    Consciousness & MindModality & Possibility
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    Modality & PossibilityConsciousness & Mind

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    If one rejects analytical (behaviourist or functionalist) accounts of mental pre...The mind has no more than causal ontological dependence on the body (not logical...

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    The conceivability argument does not definitively refute all reasons f...95%There may be other reasons for believing in mind-body dependence beyon...92%The conceivability argument does not pre-empt claims about dependence ...86%The conceivability argument and the knowledge argument pose serious ch...81%

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    SEP: dualism
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    Because ‘thickness’ always leaves room for dispute, this is one of those cases in philosophy in which one is at the mercy of the arguments philosophers happen to think up. The conceivability argument creates a prima facie case for thinking that mind has no more than causal ontological dependence on the body. Let us assume that one rejects analytical (behaviourist or functionalist) accounts of mental predicates. Then the above arguments show that any necessary dependence of mind on body does not

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