Dualism is when two different things work together to make something happen, just like your brain and body working as a team.
Imagine you're playing with two toy cars on a track. One car is the brain, and it tells the other car, the body, where to go. The brain says "go forward," and the body moves. But they’re still two separate things, like how your brain thinks, but your hands actually do the moving.
Brain and Body as Best Friends
Your brain is like a super smart commander who decides what you want to do. It might say, "I want a cookie!" Then your body listens and goes to get it. But they're not magic, they’re just really good at working together.
Sometimes, the brain thinks something is happening, but the body doesn’t feel it yet, like when you bump your knee and it takes a second for the pain to reach your brain.
So dualism is just two parts helping each other out in everyday life, kind of like your brain and body, best friends forever. Dualism is when two different things work together to make something happen, just like your brain and body working as a team.
Imagine you're playing with two toy cars on a track. One car is the brain, and it tells the other car, the body, where to go. The brain says "go forward," and the body moves. But they’re still two separate things, like how your brain thinks, but your hands actually do the moving.
Examples
- A kid thinks they are a superhero, but their body is just running around the park.
- You feel happy even though your brain doesn't know why yet.
- Your thoughts are like a separate world from your muscles.
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See also
- What is dualism?
- Dualism vs. Monism: Are You More Than A Brain?
- How Does Substance Dualism Explained in 60 seconds Work?
- Is consciousness a fundamental property of all matter?
- What If We’re Living in a Computer Simulation?