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20 questions
“ I think, therefore I am.”
Socrates
David Hume
Rene Descartes
Gilbert Ryle
“The mind is an iceberg. It floats with one-seventh of its bulk above water.”
Aristotle
Immanuel Kant
Sigmund Freud
John Locke
“Know thyself.”
Socrates
Plato
Aristotle
Rene Descartes
Everyone started as a blank state, and the content is provided by one’s experiences over time (tabula rasa).
Gilbert Ryle
Socrates
David Hume
John Locke
There is an inner self (One’s psychological state and intellect) and outer self (one’s senses and the physical world.
Paul Churchland
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Edmund Husserl
Immanuel Kant
A neuroscientist who states that it is the physical brain and not the imaginary mind comprises the self.
Paul Churchland
Immanuel Kant
John Locke
David Humes
The more a person knows, the greater his or her ability to reason and make choices that will bring tru happiness.
Aristotle
Socrates
Immanuel Kant
Gilbert Ryle
He advocates that the mind has 2 fundamental capacities: receptivity and spontaneity.
Sigmund Freud
Immanuel Kant
Paul Churchland
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
He distinguished the body into 2 types: subjective body and objective body.
Socrates
Gilbert Ryle
Plato
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
He considered self to be founded in consciousness or memory and not on substance of either soul and body.
John Locke
David Hume
Edmund Husserl
Rene Descartes
“There is no self.”
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
David Hume
Gilbert Ryle
Paul Churchland
The self is multilayered comprising of the id, ego, and superego
Edmund Husserl
Rene Descartes
Sigmund Freud
Immanuel Kant
The soul has three parts: rational soul, spiritual soul, and appetitive soul.
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
Every human person is dualistic. He is composed of the imperfect, impermanent body and the perfect, permanent soul.
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
“An unexamined life is not worth living.”
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
Self is composed of matter and form. Matter is in continuous process of developing and becoming.
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
The responsibility of the Reason is to restore harmony amongst the three.
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
The goal of the human self is reached in happiness through moderation of things.
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
The self is a bundle or collection of impressions and ideas.
David Hume
Gilbert Ryle
Rene Descartes
Immanuel Kant
We experience our self as a unity, in which the mental and physical state are seamlessly woven together.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Gilbert Ryle
Edmund Husserl
Sigmund Freud
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