Relations (1)

related 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts

Substance dualism is a specific, traditional category of the broader philosophical concept of dualism, as established by the classification systems described in [1], [2], and [3]. Furthermore, [4] explicitly identifies substance dualism as the traditional version of dualism, while [5] discusses the linguistic relationship between the two terms.

Facts (5)

Sources
The Hard Problem of Consciousness | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com Springer 2 facts
claimOntological models regarding the hard problem of consciousness can be classified into monist ontologies and dualisms, with monisms further divided into materialisms and idealisms, and dualisms into substance dualisms and aspect dualisms.
claimThe author defines 'monism' exclusively as eliminative monisms (referred to as 'negative approaches' by von Stillfried in 2018) and classifies all non-eliminative ontologies (von Stillfried's 'positive approaches') as types of dualism, specifically distinguishing between substance and aspect dualism.
Mind and Consciousness - St Andrews Encyclopaedia of Theology saet.ac.uk St Andrews Encyclopaedia of Theology 1 fact
claimThe term 'substance dualism' is potentially misleading because 'dualism' implies only two kinds of things, whereas many substance dualists believe there are an indefinite number of substances.
Dualism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Winter 2016 Edition) plato.stanford.edu Howard Robinson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimDualism is categorized into three primary types: substance dualism, property dualism, and predicate dualism.
Non-physicalist Theories of Consciousness cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 1 fact
claimSubstance dualism, the traditional version of dualism defended by René Descartes, regards the mental and the physical as two different fundamental substances or kinds of stuff.