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Publication Date:
April 2008
ISSN:
1613-0650
DOI:
10.1515/AGPH.2008.002

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Ed. by Horn, Christoph / Serck-Hanssen, Camilla

Together with Mercer, Christia

3 Issues per year

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Descartes on Composites, Incomplete Substances, and Kinds of Unity

Dan Kaufman

1Boulder

Citation Information: Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie. Volume 90, Issue 1, Pages 39–73, ISSN (Online) 1613-0650, ISSN (Print) 0003-9101, DOI: 10.1515/AGPH.2008.002, April 2008

Publication History:
Published Online:
2008-04-25

Abstract

It is widely-accepted that Descartes is a substance dualist, i.e. that he holds that there are two and only two kinds of finite substance – mind and body. However, several scholars have argued that Descartes is a substance trialist, where the third kind of substance he admits is the substantial union of a mind and a body, the human being. In this paper, I argue against the trialist interpretation of Descartes. First, I show that the strongest evidence for trialism, based on Descartes' discussion of so-called incomplete substances, is highly inconclusive. Second, I show that a kind of unity (‘unity of nature’), which is had by all and only substances, is not had by human beings. The fact that the proper parts of a human being, namely a mind and a body, are of different natures entails that what they compose has at most a ‘unity of composition’. And a thing cannot be a substance in virtue of having a unity of composition. Therefore, Cartesian human beings are not substances.

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