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Asking Both the User’s Heart and Its Owner: Empirical Evidence for Substance Dualism

In: Information Systems and Neuroscience

Author

Listed:
  • Ricardo Buettner

    (Aalen University)

  • Lars Bachus

    (Aalen University)

  • Larissa Konzmann

    (Aalen University)

  • Sebastian Prohaska

    (Aalen University)

Abstract

Mind-body physicalism is the metaphysical view that all mental phenomena are ultimately physical phenomena, or are necessitated by physical phenomena. Mind-body dualism is the view that at least some mental phenomena are non-physical. While mind-related concepts are usually measured using questionnaires, body-related concepts are measured using physiological instruments. We breakdown the narrowed measuring approaches within the simplified mind-body discussion to all four possible substance-measuring pairs and evaluate the mind-body substance dualism theory versus the physicalism theory applying perceived and physiological measured stress data using a wearable long-term electrocardiogram recorder. As a result we derive empirical evidence and strong arguments against physicalism, and assess the overall strength of the benefits of NeuroIS instruments as complementary measures.

Suggested Citation

  • Ricardo Buettner & Lars Bachus & Larissa Konzmann & Sebastian Prohaska, 2019. "Asking Both the User’s Heart and Its Owner: Empirical Evidence for Substance Dualism," Lecture Notes in Information Systems and Organization, in: Fred D. Davis & René Riedl & Jan vom Brocke & Pierre-Majorique Léger & Adriane B. Randolph (ed.), Information Systems and Neuroscience, pages 251-257, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:lnichp:978-3-030-01087-4_30
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-01087-4_30
    as

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