ABSTRACT

First published in 1969, The Elusive Mind argues that the mental processes are of a quite different nature from physical ones and belong to an entity which is elusive in the sense that it can only be known, in the first instance, by each person in his own case in the course of having any kind of experience. This ‘elusive’ self is much involved with the body in any conditions we know, but it could also survive the dissolution of the body. The views of thinkers like Ryle, Hampshire, Malcolm, Feigl, and Ayer are subjected to an exceptionally close and critical scrutiny. In presenting these views, the author offers us the substance of the first series of Gifford Lectures he delivered in the University of Edinburgh; and, in what he says on such topics as dreaming; mysticism; and the ‘I-Thou’ relation and on Christian Theology.

This book will be an essential read for scholars and researchers of philosophy, philosophy of mind, ethics, and religion.

chapter Chapter I|30 pages

Ryle and Descartes

chapter Chapter II|23 pages

‘Knowing How’ and Voluntary Action

chapter Chapter III|29 pages

Some Further Themes of The Concept of Mind

chapter Chapter IV|17 pages

The New Materialism

chapter Chapter V|13 pages

‘The Humpty Dumpty Argument’

chapter Chapter VI|20 pages

Dreaming and Experience

chapter Chapter VII|17 pages

Persons and the Structure of Language

chapter Chapter VIII|15 pages

Some Conventional Objections to Dualism

chapter Chapter IX|32 pages

The Identity Thesis

chapter Chapter X|16 pages

Memory and Self-Identity

chapter Chapter XI|22 pages

The Elusive Self

chapter Chapter XII|11 pages

Self-Identity and Bodily Identity

chapter Chapter XIII|15 pages

The Elusive Self and the ‘I-Thou Relation’

chapter Chapter XIV|20 pages

Idealism

chapter Chapter XV|25 pages

Mysticism and Monism

chapter Chapter XVI|9 pages

The Elusive Self in Morals and Religion