JOG.2453

WHAT DO we REALLY KNOW ????
        JOG.2449 ~~~~ JOG.2518

THE WORD ~~~~
OLD WORD OF THE BCE ~~~~
tanakh blue jewish publication society © 1985
NEW WORD OF THE CE ~~~~
revised standard version bible zondervan etal © 1946                       etal { EXCLUDING THE TEACHINGS OF SPAUL ( SAUL X PAUL GALATIANS 4.14 X                 6.17 ETAL ) }
BOTH WITH
TWis { THE WORD in spirit ~~~~ a _BIGWOR_  work in progress }                                                       INTERPRETATIONS X JOHN 4.23 & 24

REFRESH your mind TO CONTINUE !X!!!!!!!X!!!!!!! ] !!!! [ !!!!!!!X!!!!!!!X!

TOG 8

A&Q ][ Q&A:

  1. ~~~~~~~~ THE MIND X THE SUBJECT OF MUCH DEBATE ~~~~~~~~

  2. MIND–BODY PROBLEM: the problem of accounting for and describing the relationship between mental and physical processes (PSYCHE X soma). Solutions to this problem fall into six broad categories: (a) interactionism, in which mind and body are separate processes that nevertheless exert mutual influence (see Cartesian dualism JOG.2455); (b) parallelism, in which mind and body are separate processes with a point-to-point correspondence but no causal connection (see occasionalism; preestablished harmony); (c) idealism, in which only mind exists and the soma is a function of the psyche; (d) double-aspect theory, in which body and mind are both functions of a common entity (see neutral monism); (e) epiphenomenalism, in which mind is a by-product of bodily processes; and (f) materialism, in which body is the only reality and the psyche is nonexistent.

  3. Categories (a) and (b) are varieties of dualism; the remainder are varieties of monism. In the context of psychopathology, two central questions arising from the mind–body problem are which sphere takes precedence in the genesis and development of illness and how does each sphere affect the other. Also called body–mind problem.

  4. philosophy of mind: the branch of philosophy concerned with QUESTIONS about THE NATURE and functioning of mind and consciousness and the relationship of mind and mental activity to brain and body and to the external world (see mind–body problem). It is deeply concerned with the relationships among language, thought, and action.

  5. Links from AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION ~ APA Dictionary of Psychology: mind – APA Dictionary of Psychology