Yeah, one of the main virtues IMHO of "Giving Dualism Its Due" , was his fair handling of the interaction problem.
He also makes a great deal about spacially locating mind in the head as a necessary condition for overcoming certain materialist objection. I am not so ready to give up the idea that mental objects, like numbers, have no spacial extention.
He also makes a great deal about spacially locating mind in the head as a necessary condition for overcoming certain materialist objection. I am not so ready to give up the idea that mental objects, like numbers, have no spacial extention.
<insert profound quote here>