5. Arguments for the existence of the soul, Part III: Free will and near-death experiences
Death (PHIL 176) Professor Kagan discusses in detail the argument of free will as proof for the existence of an immaterial soul. The argument consists of three premises: 1) We have free will. 2) Nothing subject to determinism has free will. 3) All purely physical systems are subject to determinism. The conclusion drawn from this is that humans are not a purely physical system; but Professor Kagan explains why this argument is not truly compelling. In addition, near-death experiences and the Cartesian argument are discussed at length. 00:00 - Chapter 1. The Dualist's Stance on Free Will and the Soul's Existence 04:57 - Chapter 2. Determinism and Free Will Cannot Coexist -- Inspecting Incompatibility 15:22 - Chapter 3. Positing the Soul's Existence for Near-Death Experiences 28:14 - Chapter 4. Does a Physical Understanding of Supernatural Phenomena Exist? 36:33 - Chapter 5. Introduction to Descartes's Cartesian Argument: The Mind and the Body Are Not the Same 45:34 - Chapter 6. Conclusion Complete course materials are available at the Yale Online website: online.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2007.

6. Arguments for the existence of the soul, Part IV; Plato, Part I

7. Plato, Part II: Arguments for the immortality of the soul

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4. Introduction to Plato's Phaedo; Arguments for the existence of the soul, Part II

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25. Suicide, Part II: Deciding under uncertainty

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9. Plato, Part IV: Arguments for the immortality of the soul (cont.)

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2. The nature of persons: dualism vs. physicalism

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22. Fear of death

