From 1612, when he left La Flèche, until 1628, when he settled in Holland, Descartes spent much of his time in travel, contemplation, and correspondence. From 1628 until his ill-fated trip to Sweden in 1649 he remained for the most part in Holland, and it was during this period that he composed a series of works that set the agenda for all later students of mind and body. The first of these works, De homine [1] was completed in Holland about 1633, on the eve of the condemnation of Galileo. When Descartes' friend and frequent correspondent, Marin Mersenne, wrote to him of Galileo's fate at the hands of the Inquisition, Descartes immediately suppressed his own treatise. As a result, the world's first extended essay on physiological psychology was published only well after its author's death.
In this
work, Descartes proposed a mechanism [see figure 2] for automatic reaction in
response to external events. According to his proposal, external motions affect
the peripheral ends of the nerve fibrils, which in turn displace the
central ends. As the central ends are displaced, the pattern of
interfibrillar space is rearranged and the flow of animal
spirits is thereby directed into the appropriate nerves. It was Descartes'
articulation of this mechanism for automatic, differentiated reaction that led
to his generally being credited with the founding of reflex theory.
Although extended discussion of the metaphysical split between mind and body did not appear until Descartes' Meditationes, his De homine outlined these views and provided the first articulation of the mind/body interactionism that was to elicit such pronounced reaction from later thinkers. In Descartes' conception, the rational soul, an entity distinct from the body and making contact with the body at the pineal gland, might or might not become aware of the differential outflow of animal spirits brought about through the rearrangement of the interfibrillar spaces. When such awareness did occur, however, the result was conscious sensation -- body affecting mind. In turn, in voluntary action, the soul might itself initiate a differential outflow of animal spirits. Mind, in other words, could also affect body.
The year 1641 saw the appearance of Descartes' Meditationes de prima
philosophia, in quibus Dei existentia, & animae à corpore distinctio,
demonstratur
In 1649,
on the eve of his departure for Stockholm to take up residence as instructor to
Queen Christina of Sweden, Descartes sent the manuscript of the last of his
great works, Les passions de l'ame[3], to press. Les
passions [see figure 3] is Descartes' most important contribution to
psychology proper. In addition to an analysis of primary emotions, it contains
Descartes' most extensive account of causal mind/body interactionism and of the
localization of the soul's contact with the body in the pineal gland. As is well
known, Descartes chose the pineal gland because it appeared to him to be the
only organ in the brain that was not bilaterally duplicated and because he
believed, erroneously, that it was uniquely human.
In February of 1650, returning in the bitter cold from a session with Queen
Christina, who insisted on receiving her instruction at 5 a.m., Descartes
contracted pneumonia. Within a week, the man who had given direction to much of
later philosophy was dead. By focusing on the problem of true and certain
knowledge, Descartes had made epistemology, the question of the relationship
between mind and world, the starting point of philosophy. By localizing the
soul's contact with body in the pineal gland, Descartes had raised the question
of the relationship of mind to the brain and nervous system. Yet at the same
time, by drawing a radical ontological distinction between body as extended and
mind as pure thought, Descartes, in search of certitude, had paradoxically
created intellectual chaos.