Non-Cartesian substance dualism (NCSD) maintains that
persons or
selves are distinct from their organic physical bodies and any parts of those bodies. It regards persons as ‘substances’ in their
own right, but does not maintain that persons are necessarily separable from their bodies, in the sense of being capable of
disembodied existence. In this paper, it is urged that NCSD is better equipped than either Cartesian dualism or standard forms
of physicalism to explain the possibility of mental causation. A model of mental causation adopting the NCSD perspective is
proposed which, it is argued, is consistent with all that is currently known about the operations of the human central nervous
system, including the brain. Physicalism, by contrast, seems ill-equipped to explain the distinctively intentional or teleological
character of mental causation, because it effectively reduces all such causation to ‘blind’ physical causation at a neurological
level.