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mind |
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mindIn philosophy, the presumed mental or physical being or faculty that enables a person to think, will, and feel; the seat of the intelligence and of memory; sometimes only the cognitive or intellectual powers, as distinguished from the will and the emotions. Mind may be seen as synonymous with the merely random chemical reactions within the brain, or as a function of the brain as a whole, or (more traditionally) as existing independently of the physical brain, through which it expresses itself, or even as the only reality, matter being considered the creation of intelligence. The relation of mind to matter may be variously regarded. Traditionally, materialism identifies mental and physical phenomena equally in terms of matter and motion. Dualism holds that mind and matter exist independently side by side. Idealism maintains that mind is the ultimate reality and that matter does not exist apart from it. Mind
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Warthe Warwick Warwick Castle Warwick, Dionne Warwick, Kevin Warwick, Richard Neville, 1st or 16th Earl of Warwick Warwickshire was of two minds Wasatch Mountains Wasco Wasdale Waseca Wash, the Washakie Washburn, Cadwallader Colden |
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