Historical Conceptions of an Enduring Issue
This paper examines the views and philosophies of multiple significant contributors to the mind and body scholarly discussion. In addition, this paper discusses the antecedents of the schools of thought in modern psychology while also focusing on the mind-body relationship and correlation to introspection. This paper also asserts that mind and body belong to one being, which assists in interpreting environment and situations, enabling and verbalizing internal emotions and thoughts. The historical contributions will be examined for multiple themes that serve as the theoretical foundation, such as the mind-body relationship, introspection, and structuralism. The brief history of the identified themes
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According to Schultz and Schultz (2016), introspection examines one’s mind to inspect and report personal thoughts or feelings (p. 384). Aspiring to move controlled empirical research environment, methods, and means to study internal perceptions (Lopez-Garrido, 2021), William Wundt is credited with opening the first experimental laboratory in 1879. Werning (2010) explained that introspective self-awareness could be analyzed through conceptually structured thoughts rather than as a form of phenomenal experience. Such structured practices assisted in the pursuit of correlation between physical events through introspective self-reporting, emotions, and feelings to serve as facts without assignment of value or …show more content…
He further asserted that individuals possess the mental capacity to understand their true nature and that this self-knowledge is essential to living a life of moral integrity (Joshi, A., Roy, S., Kumar Manik, R., & Kumar, S., 2023). This philosopher ridiculed the view that emotional problems lead to mental illnesses (The School of Life, 2015). Kant’s theory that self-reflection is an essential tenant of growth and self-realization further fuels the theory that one performed morally was only based on their duty to behave in such a manner. Speaking on his views of moral law and inherited intelligence, Kant offered 12 categories to improve such understandings by explaining the “human mind, but not the mind, life, and life alone, which are the thing-in-itself (Zhang,