Waubonsee Community College

Death of the soul, from Descartes to the computer, William Barrett

Label
Death of the soul, from Descartes to the computer, William Barrett
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Death of the soul
Oclc number
12418684
Responsibility statement
William Barrett
Sub title
from Descartes to the computer
Summary
Ever since Descartes saw nature as a vast, interlocking machine and science banished the soul, philosophers have been uncomfortable with this materialistic outlook. Barrett (Irrational Man here looks at the way in which various thinkers have attempted to put the human soul or self in the forefront of their visions of reality. He discusses Leibniz's energized universe of monads, or individual souls, Hegel's blueprint for self-realization as part of the unfolding of the "world spirit" and the existentialists' belief that anxiety and death are personal problems each of us must wrestle with. Unconvinced by modern descriptions of the mind as a computer, Barrett debunks Alan Turing's claim that a future computer could write first-rate poetry; he also refutes behaviorism and Wittgenstein. This short book engages the reader in an open-ended dialogue with major Western thinkers on the central questions of the soul, death and consciousness
Table Of Contents
Part : 1 Gathering of a new age -- A century of genius -- Soul and reason -- The puzzle of sensation -- Part 2: The pivot -- A map of the modern world -- The power of the midn -- The finitude of mind -- Duty and beauty -- Dispersion -- The substantial soul -- The disappearing self -- Analytic philosophy and the computer
Classification
Content
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