1. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

    I. P. Pavlov claimed that the mind-body problem would ultimately be resolved by empirical methods, rather than by rational arguments. A committed monist, Pavlov was confronted by dualism in the case of an hysterical person. Under normal conditions, her body's left side was insensitive to pain, but w …
    Author:George WindholzPublished:1997
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  3. link.springer.com

    I. P. Pavlov claimed that the mind-body problem would ultimately be resolved by empirical methods, rather than by rational arguments. A committed monist, Pavlov was confronted by dualism in the case of an hysterical person. Under normal conditions, her body's left side was insensitive to pain, but when she was hypnotized, there was a reversal of her sensitivity to pain, with the right side ...
    Author:George WindholzPublished:1997
  4. en.wikipedia.org

    In the philosophy of mind, mind-body dualism denotes either that mental phenomena are non-physical, [1] or that the mind and body are distinct and separable. [2] Thus, it encompasses a set of views about the relationship between mind and matter, as well as between subject and object, and is contrasted with other positions, such as physicalism and enactivism, in the mind-body problem.
  5. link.springer.com

    Pavlov studied the mechanisms of digestion in dogs and regarded the biological body as a machine (following the mechanical view), arguing the digestive system functions like a factory. He measured the quantity of saliva produced during feeding in the dog's mouth and discovered the conditioned reflexes , arguing they were the "atoms of ...
    Author:Jessica LindblomPublished:2015
  6. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    https://iep.utm.edu › dualism-and-mind

    Death liberates the soul, greatly increasing its apprehension of truth. As such, the philosophical soul is unafraid to die and indeed looks forward to death as to liberation. b. The Argument From Recollection. A second argument from the Phaedo is the Argument from Recollection. Socrates argues that the soul must exist prior to birth because we ...
  7. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Briefly describe the life and work of Ivan M. Sechenov (1829-1905), including his views regarding the concept of inhibition and the relationship between physiology and psychology. (pp. 384-388), Briefly describe the life and work of Ivan Petrovitch Pavlov (1849-1936). Describe (a) Pavlov's work in studying the digestive process ...
  8. academic.oup.com

    This he opposed to subjective psychological methodologies that proceeded from postulates about the animal's "internal, ... he referred in articles and talks to "so-called psychic" and "so-called dushevnye" (literally "of the soul") phenomena; ... For Pavlov, this "experimental investigation of emotions," by clearly revealing ...
  9. cambridge.org

    Pavlov came to the effort in his fifties, after decades of research that took for granted a sharp separation between neurophysiology and psychology. He changed his mind as he noticed the descent of his discipline from study of whole-body and organ functions to concentration on the neuron and the molecule. Pavlov thought to save the discipline ...
  10. psycnet.apa.org

    Ivan P. Pavlov (1849-1936), while studying in the 1860s at the Riazan' Ecclesiastic Seminary, was profoundly influenced by Russian translations of Western natural science literature, especially that with strong Darwinian overtones, and he abandoned a career in the church. He became a professor of physiology in 1895 at the Imperial Military-Medical Academy in St. Petersburg, where he did ...

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