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dualism a view of the world which holds that there are two ultimately distinct principles, or spheres, such as good and evil, or matter and spirit.
Ãâó: www.atf.org.au/papers/glossary.asp
dualism Any view that postulates two kinds of things in some domain is dualist; contrasting views according to which there is only one kind of thing are monistic. The most famous example of the contrast is mind-body dualism, contrasted with monism in the form either of idealism (only mind) or more often physicalism (only body or matter).
Ãâó: www.philosophy.uncc.edu/mleldrid/intro/odop.html
dualism Dualists believe that the world consists of both mental and physical objects, like minds and bodies respectively. Most of the major philosophers, including Descartes and Locke, were dualists.
Ãâó: www.elliotcross.com/glossary.html
dualism The ego involved in making an apparent choice between interconnected opposites; see ego/ doer, duality, free will, involvement
Ãâó: www.hermetic-philosophy.com/glossary3.htm
dualism The view that mind and matter are two distinct things. Mind inhabits the body. Descartes was a proponent of this view.
Ãâó: www.intelligentchristian.org/Glossary.htm
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