I S S N:24559164 Vol .2,No.1,F ebr uar y2017 EMa i l :edi t or i j edt l @g ma i l . c om ori j edt l @t r pubonl i ne. c om Webs i t e:www. t r pubonl i ne. c om Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 ISSN 2455-9164 www.trpubonline.com Vol. 2, No. 1, February 2017 © 2017 Thomson & Ryberg Publications. All Rights Reserved Acceleriated Learning, Mental Imagery, Perception and Conscious Experience: Contributions of Rene Descartes Linda K Newsome1 and Mammy M Helou1* *Corresponding Author: Mammy M Helou, Given the debatable issues related to the subjective nature of the conscious experience, which resist the objective analysis and empirical evidence required by physical science (Armstrong, 1981), the relationship and the nature of the connection between the body and the mind, and its impact on the processes of mental imagery (McDaniel and Einstein, 1986), and perception and learning (Meier, 2000), continue to be an interesting area of research. A literature review of the representative literature published on the Mind-Body problem clearly indicates that a unanimous agreement has not been reached in terms of the relationship between the mind, soul and consciousness on the one hand; and the brain, body and senses on the other. This study presents a fourfold analysis. First, Descartes’ argument for a version of mind-body dualism is discussed. Secondly, objections to Descartes’ arguments are considered. Thirdly, the current study evaluates the validity of Descartes’ argument in light of the discussed objections. Finally, this study concludes with an evaluation of the contributions of Rene Descartes’ argument to the processes of mental imagery, perception, conscious experience, and accelerated learning. Keywords: Mental imagery, Conscious experience, Perception, Experiential learning, Accelerated learning, Rene descartes ‘je pense, donc je suis; cogito ergo sum’ empirical evidence required by physical science (Armstrong, 1981), the relationship and the nature of the connection between the body and the mind, and its impact on the processes of imagery (McDaniel and Einstein, 1986), and perception and learning (Meier, 2000), remains an interesting (Rene Descartes, 1637) Introduction In light of the debatable issues related to the subjective nature of conscious experience, which struggle with objective analysis and This article can be downloaded from http://www.trpubonline.com/journals.php 9 Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 research area. A literature review of the representative books and academic articles published on the Mind-Body problem, clearly indicate that a unanimous agreement has not been reached in terms of the relationship between the mind, soul and consciousness on the one hand, and the brain, body and senses on the other (Velmans, 2002). Accordingly, the current research paper aims at casting further light on this area of research, by exploring and evaluating the level of contributions of the French philosopher and mathematician Rene Descartes’s work on issues of mental imagery, perception, conscious experience, and accelerated learning. the fact that the conscious mind controls the behaviour and actions in everyday life, is also accepted (Velmans, 2002). Nevertheless, this begs the questions of: How does the conscious mind exert its influence? Are the body and the mind of distinct or the same substances? If they are of distinct substances, are they somehow connected? If yes, how? Furthermore, how does this affect mental imagery, perception, conscious experience and learning, let alone accelerate learning? In other words, does the mind control the brain or vice versa? Or, are they so undistinguishably interconnected to the point that the question of which is in control does not truly apply? To this end, this study is fourfold. First, a presentation of Descartes’ argument for a version of mind-body dualism is provided. Secondly, the objections to Descartes’s arguments are analysed. This is followed by an evaluation of the validity of Descartes’ argument in light of other scholars and philosophers’ voiced objections. Finally, the current study discusses Descartes’ contributions to the processes of mental imagery, perception, conscious experience and learning. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (plato .stanfor d.edu/e ntries/mentalimagery/#MeaConMenlma), first published in 1997, with substantive revision in 2014, defines visual mental imagery as a quasiperceptual experience, that is, it is similar to perceptual experience, but takes place in the absence of an external stimuli; and is believed to play a crucial part in all thought processes. It is a routine experience, being a regular feature of our daily life. Furthermore, according to Yates (1966) and Paivio (1986), imagery plays a salient role in the memory. It has been colloquially referred to as ‘visualising‘, ‘having a picture in the head’, ‘picturing‘, ‘seeing a mental image/picture’, …etc. Even though there seems to be an agreement to the fact that the part that exerts control in everyday life is the conscious mind, up to this date there is no accepted theory of Mind-Body interaction (Stam, 1998; and Velmans, 2002), which has unfortunately had a drastic impact on the acceptance of mental causation in various fields of study, including medicine, philosophy and science (Velmans, 2002). That is, the effects of the mind on the body is accepted, in as much as Furthermore, given Kouyoumdjian’s (2012) experience, in addition to facilitating learning, imagery further accelerates it. Unlike other scholars who claim that information derived from imagery is different to that derived out of perception, This article can be downloaded from http://www.trpubonline.com/journals.php 10 Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 Thomas (1999) argues that mental imagery supports some inference that leads to new knowledge about the world. Given the lack of harmony with the various views, featured in the representative literature on imagery, perception – including students’ perception (Krunic and Helou, 2008; and Lee and Lee, 2016), conscious experience and learning (Helou and Helou, 2008), the current research study considers and evaluates the notions and work of the French philosopher, Rene Descartes, in this area, as a means of casting further light on this intriguing, but highly debated, area of study. St. Thomas Aquinas were amongst Rene Descartes precursors, whose writings feature interesting parallel views and corresponding thoughts to that of Descartes. Given both the objections to and the agreements with Descartes’ Mind-Body dichotomy, the current study aims at evaluating the level of contributions of Rene Descartes’ arguments to imagery, perception and learning. Substance Dualism, Mental Imagery, Perception and Learning This section presents Descartes’ argument for a version of mind-body dualism. Given this debatable issue (Nagel, 1994), the nature of the connection between the body and the mind, and its impact on imagery, perception and learning, continues to be uncertain (Cytowic, 1988). As per Substance dualism, Descartes argued that man consists of a compound of two inharmonious and different kinds of substances: a physical mechanical body and an incorporeal soul (Descartes, Second Meditations, in Nagel, 1987), which notably he also defined as mind, intellect, intelligence, reason, and as ‘I’ or the ‘cogito’. He explained that mental life goes on in the soul (Bechtel, 1988). To Descartes, the question of whether the mind is a different substance from the body is a legacy. He mentioned that while the body is visible and tangible, that is, it has a definite shape, location and occupies space; the mind is intangible, that is, it is the perceiving. He argued that sense perceptions and appetite are contingent upon having a body, but thinking is not. It is the ‘I’ that thinks. According to Descartes, the activity of thinking, which is Rene Descartes (1596-1650), was a seventeenth century ‘rationalist’ philosopher, mathematician and scientist. He contended that the mind is better known than the body, the body and the mind are two distinct and separate substances (Cottingham et al., 1988), and that there is systematic causal interaction between them. Other ‘materialist’ philosophers, who saw weaknesses in Rene Descartes’ Cartesian system (Cottingham, 1988), argued for the opposite, that is, the mind and the body must in some sense be the same, as such, the states of the mind are reducible to brain states (Shaffer, 1971; and Searle, 1994). On the one hand, various scholars and theologians have criticised Descartes’ Cartesian dualism (Cottingham, 1988). This included Thomas Hobbes (Hobbes, 1997; and Malcolm, 1997), Pierre Gassendi (Ryle, 1949), Jesuit Pierre Bourdin and Gisbertus Voetius (Cottingham, 1988). On the other hand, various other thinkers, scholars and theologians shared similar arguments to that of Descartes. For example, St. Augustine and This article can be downloaded from http://www.trpubonline.com/journals.php 11 Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 independent from the body, defines the ‘I’, as in, ‘But what am I? A thing that thinks. What is that? A thing that doubts, understands, affirms, denies, is willing, is unwilling, and also imagines and has sensory perceptions’ (Descartes, Second Meditations, in Nagel, 1987: 83). states, ‘I can achieve an easier and more evident perception of my own mind than of anything else’ (Descartes, Second Meditations, in Nagel, 1987: 86). He concludes that the mind is better known than the body. Nevertheless, Descartes’ claim that the mind is ‘transparent’, is rather doubtful, as he failed to prove it, or even discuss it. To address the epistemological puzzle of how we gain certain knowledge of the world, through sense perception or understanding, Descartes takes a case of ordinary perception and considers the changes to the sensory and secondary properties (smell, taste, visibility, colour, size, form, temperature, shape, hardness, ease of handling) of a piece of wax. Once put by the fire, it is reduced to primary properties, namely ‘extended, flexible, and changeable’ (Descartes, Second Meditations, in Nagel, 1987: 84). Descartes further argued that the true nature of the wax is not revealed by the senses or through the faculty of imagination, but through intellect, understanding and the ‘scrutiny of the mind alone’ (Descartes, Second Meditations, in Nagel, 1987: 85). Descartes concludes that ‘perception now requires a human mind’ (Descartes, Second Meditations, in Nagel, 1987: 85). Objections to the Cartesian Dualism Subjecting all knowledge to the test of ‘radical doubt’, to derive his point of certainty, namely, the ‘thinking thing’, or the ’cogito’, raised the anger, rage, fury and hostility of other philosophers, scholars and theologians (Cottingham, 1988), who voiced their objections to his ‘dualist’ Mind-Body approach. This section presents the objections voiced against Descartes’ arguments. First, Substance dualism presents a major problem for Descartes in terms of his provision of an explanation as to how the mind and the body interact in their separate realms. That is, the most famous objection to Descartes Mind-Body dualism relates to the notion of causal interaction between the radically different and independent substances of the mind and the body. On the one hand, the mind, independent of the body, does the thinking; while, on the other hand, imagination, sensation and purposeful movement of the body do not take place without the mind (Popper and Eccles, 1981). Building on his argument for how one develops an understanding of the primary properties of wax through purely mental scrutiny, Descartes explains that he now knows himself more distinctly. The more he understands and learns about things, the better he understands and learns about himself. Descartes explains that the mind or intellect, as distinct from the body, understands and reflects on itself. Towards the end of his second meditation, Descartes Descartes explains that, ‘the idea we have of the body and the mind in union are different from, and irreducible to, the ideas we have of either extended matter, or of This article can be downloaded from http://www.trpubonline.com/journals.php 12 Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 thinking substance’ (Descartes, 1649; The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http:/ /www.utm.edu/research/iep/d/ descarte,htm). Nevertheless, their ‘union’ does not explain the sensory and motor communication between the spirit mind and the physical body. In a book titled, The Passions of the Soul, the last of Descartes published work, which he commenced in 1943 as a synthesis of his exchanges with Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia about theorising ‘the passions’, namely, the nature of happiness, passions and ethics, and completed in 1649; he explains his version of the mysterious dichotomy of the mind and the body, and argues that the pineal gland, located in the centre of the brain, is the site of interaction. Nevertheless, this still failed to solve the causal interaction problem, being a main concern that the criticising scholars and ‘materialist’ philosophers have raised in opposition to his version of Mind-Body dichotomy. If anything at all, it has actually created further confusion in relation to how both the mind and the body interact with the pineal gland itself, an issue that was not discussed in the book. In summary, Descartes failed to offer an explanation of the causal interaction between the mental and the physical substances. ‘body’, and the ‘ghost’ is the ‘spirit’ in the body (Priest, 1991). Ryle (1949) describes the ‘dogma of the ghost in the machine’, or ‘The Official Doctrine’, as a philosopher’s myth. On this conception, mind is inside the body, controls it and is in contact with it through the brain. For example, it is the brain that tells you that you are hungry, but it is the mind that determines what you desire to eat. Even if ‘popular dualism’ is true, there is no empirical evidence that the mind can survive death of the body. It could well be that the problem lies in the manner in which the mental and physical processes are perceived. Perhaps as Ryle (1949) suggests, a ‘category mistake’ is made. It might be the case that the mind involves structure or organisation of a considerable number of mental states, as opposed to an additional thing or a category of its own, that is, ‘No ghost in the machine, just ghostly machines’. Is Descartes’ Argument Valid? This section presents an analysis and evaluation of the validity of Descartes’ argument in light of the above voiced objections. Does the fact that ‘there is thinking happening’ justify the argument that ‘I exist’? Has Descartes derived a valid argument in light of the various objections voiced against the Substance dualism conception? Although it is a matter of personal faith, from a religious point of view, the substance dualist notion of the mind and body is widely accepted. For example, the Church believes in the immortality of the soul and the Day of judgement, where the body will stand in the flesh in the hands of Another main objection to the Cartesian dualism is that, if there truly is a division between the mind and the body, Descartes has failed to draw the dividing line (Churchland, 1987). Gilbert Ryle’s (1949) metaphor of Descartes’ ‘ghost in the machine’, portrays substance dualism’s conception of a human; the ‘machine’ as the This article can be downloaded from http://www.trpubonline.com/journals.php 13 Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 the Lord awaiting judgement, while the mind rushes through the chapters of the good and the bad deeds that have been committed in this world. From a cognitive point of view, human capabilities including the use of language, mathematical calculations and abstract reflections represent mental phenomena (Sterelny, 1990), which go beyond physical explanations. chemical change in the brain changes the mental perceptions (Hofmann, 1969). On 16 April, 1943, after Hofmann (1969) accidentally ingested a small amount of LSD (Reed, 2008), he stated that he felt he was being, ‘… affected by a remarkable restlessness, combined with a slight dizziness. At home, I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant intoxicated-like condition, characterized by an extremely stimulated imagination. In a dreamlike state, with eyes closed (I found the daylight to be unpleasantly glaring). I perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors. After about two hours this condition faded away’ (Hofmann, 1969: 15). What about the brain-dependence of consciousness? May be the strongest argument against Substance dualism is the evidence that reason, emotion and consciousness are not independent from the effects of the brain. The brain-dependent character of consciousness is evident in drug ingestion, brain and nerve damages and other degenerative diseases. It may well be that consciousness is physically explainable, as evidence suggests that it is neutrally dependent. But whether it automatically can bridge the ‘explanatory gap’, still remains to be seen. Ingesting drugs, for example, affects the central nervous system by altering the manner in which the cells in the brain communicate to one another. Drugs can act as antagonists, which mimic the effects of the neurotransmitters, or as antagonists, which block the effects of the neurotransmitters (Krivanek, 2000). The effects of these chemical changes and the rise of tissue in the body have the ability to cause mood and alertness changes, as well as altered states of consciousness (Krivanek, 2000). Shortly after, on 19 April, 1943, Hofmann (1969) performed a self-experiment, whereby he intentionally ingested LSD. He started that he experienced abrupt and severe deviations in perception (Reed, 2009). As he was going home on a bicycle, his condition first declined as he was going insane, but soon his condition turned into one of pleasure (Reed, 2009). He stated that, ‘… Little by little I could begin to enjoy the unprecedented colors and plays of shapes that persisted behind closed eyes. Kaleidoscopic, fantastic images surged in on me, altering, variegated, opening and then closing themselves in circles and spirals, exploding in colored foundations, rearranging and hybridizing themselves in constant flux …’ (Reed, 2009). Ingesting LSD, a ‘consciousness-altering drug’ (Krivanek, 2000: 22), blocks the neurotransmitter serotonin (Gregory and Zanawill, 1987). In addition to affecting the functioning of the body, the resulting Furthermore, habitual use of many drugs can eventually lead to impaired processes. For example, the constant use of the drug This article can be downloaded from http://www.trpubonline.com/journals.php 14 Int. J. Educ. Teach & Learn. 2017 Linda K Newsome and Mammy M Helou, 2017 MDMA causes depression, higher order cognitive changes, anxiety, and destruction of the neurotransmitter serotonin and psychosis. Thus, the physical intake of drugs affects the state of the consciousness. In this sense, Descartes’ conception of the mind as a sort of motherboard of the computer is invalid. Descartes strongly argued that mental life creates mental imagery, mind activity facilitates perception, and mental scrutiny leads to understanding and learning. As a concluding statement, it is worthwhile to note that the reason why Rene Descartes was called the father of contemporary Western philosophy, is because much of the successive Western philosophy has primarily been a response to his valuable work and salient contributions, which continue to be analysed by modern-day scholars and philosophers. Conclusion This study concludes by presenting an evaluation of Descartes’ contributions to the processes of mental imagery, perception and experiential learning. It is interesting to note the different views, and, at times, conflicting conclusions, deduced by various scholars in terms of the nature, relationship and connection between the mind and the body (Armstrong, 1981), and their impact on mental processes, imagery and learning. Campbell (1970) for example, discusses totally different underlying assumptions involved in studying the Mind-Body problem, namely that of ‘homogeneity, individuality and reality of matter’ (Campbell, 1970: 4). 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