Reference: Postulate Mechanics
Picture two friends arguing about a campfire. One says, “The fire is just heat and light — pure physics.” The other says, “But what about the feeling of warmth, the smell of smoke, the memory of sitting here as a kid? That’s not just physics.” This argument, scaled up and made more precise, is basically what philosophers have been having for centuries about the mind and body.
Dualism is the idea that reality is made of two fundamentally different kinds of stuff — in our case, the mental (thoughts, feelings, consciousness) and the physical (brains, neurons, bodies). The dualist says these two things are so different that you can’t reduce one to the other. Your thought about the campfire is not the same kind of thing as the neurons firing in your brain, even if the two seem connected.
Monism, the opposing view, says: there is really only one kind of stuff underlying everything. Mind and body aren’t two separate substances — they’re just two different faces of the same coin.
The framework explored in this chapter — called Postulate Mechanics — starts from the idea that the universe is fundamentally one. From that vantage point, strict dualism looks like a map with a section missing. If mind and body are truly, completely different things, how do they ever talk to each other? When you decide to lift your arm, your arm moves. Something is clearly crossing the gap. That gap needs explaining.
Gradient of Substance
Here’s an analogy that cuts to the heart of it: imagine a cup of hot tea sitting in a cold room. There isn’t a sharp wall between “hot” and “cold” — there’s a smooth gradient, a continuous spectrum of temperature from the steaming surface right out to the chilly air. Heat and cold aren’t opposites from different worlds; they’re the same thing (thermal energy) at different intensities.
The same logic applies to mind and body. The mental and the physical can influence each other — your anxious thoughts make your heart race; a glass of wine relaxes your mind. This mutual influence tells us there must be a gradient connecting them, not a wall dividing them.
To understand that gradient, we need to think carefully about what “substance” means. Western philosophy has often defined substance as something that can exist entirely on its own, independently, needing nothing else. But this definition hits a snag: if something exists in complete isolation, with no way to sense or detect it, can we even say it exists at all? A color no eye could ever see, a sound no ear could ever hear — in what sense is that “real”?
A more grounded definition: substance is whatever is substantial enough to be sensed. The universe as a whole is the one thing that truly stands on its own — and we know it exists precisely because we can experience it. Everything within the universe that we can sense falls into three broad categories: matter, energy, and thought. These three are the substance of the universe.
Think of them as a spectrum. A rock is dense, slow-moving matter. Heat from that rock is energy — less tangible, but you can still feel it. Your mental image of the rock — the memory, the concept — is thought. Each step along this spectrum becomes less “solid” and more dynamic, but none of them drops off the edge into nothingness. They share a family resemblance, and that shared nature is what allows them to interact.
Reality
A word that gets thrown around a lot is “real.” What actually qualifies as real?
There are two useful ways to think about it. The first: reality is what is ultimately there, beneath appearances. Peel away the colors, the textures, the labels — what’s left? This is the philosopher’s quest for bedrock. The second: reality is simply the totality of everything that exists. Not just the hidden depths, but everything — your coffee cup, your headache, your love for someone, all of it.
Here’s where the idea of a postulate becomes useful. A postulate is a starting assumption — something you take as true and then build on, like the axioms at the start of a geometry proof. “The shortest distance between two points is a straight line” is a postulate. You don’t prove it; you start from it. In Postulate Mechanics, the foundational postulate is the oneness of the universe — everything is ultimately connected and continuous.
Every idea, observation, or claim that follows from a postulate has to hang together consistently. A bridge is “real” to the degree that all its parts — steel, bolts, cables, weight calculations — are harmonious and continuous. Pull out a bolt or miscalculate a load, and the bridge becomes less real in a practical sense: it fails. The same goes for any concept or theory. Contradictions and gaps are the philosophical version of missing bolts. The more a picture of reality holds together without internal contradictions, the more real it is.
Dualism, in its strict form, has a missing bolt: it cannot explain how the mind and body interact if they are truly and completely different substances. That missing explanation is the anomaly.
Mind-Body Dualism
So where does this leave us? Here is a clearer picture.
Your mind — your thoughts, memories, imagination, feelings — is made of thought substance. Your body — muscles, bones, neurons, the whole physical apparatus — is made of matter and energy. But crucially, both can be sensed, which means both belong on the same spectrum of substance. They are not strangers from different universes; they are more like ice and steam — very different in form, but both water.
Consider a musician learning a difficult piano piece. At first, it is pure mental effort — she consciously thinks about every note, every finger placement. Over months of practice, that mental effort carves physical grooves into her neural pathways. Eventually, her fingers move by themselves. The mental became physical. The thought became matter in motion. This is not magic; it is what you would expect if mind and body share a common substance-nature and can therefore pass information and influence between them.
Strict dualism would say this transformation is inexplicable — you can’t get from mind to matter if they’re totally different things. The gradient view says: of course they can interact, because they are neighboring regions on the same spectrum, like warm air meeting cool air and becoming a breeze.
Consciousness and physical agility are not mysteries floating above the material world — they are what matter, energy, and thought look like when they are organized in sufficiently complex, dynamic ways. A single neuron does nothing remarkable. A hundred billion of them, wired together in intricate loops, produce a person who can fall in love, write poetry, and wonder about their own existence.
Postulate Mechanics
To bring it all home: mind and body are genuinely distinct phenomena. Your thought about dinner is not the same thing as your rumbling stomach. There are real differences, and it is worth studying them. But the strict dualist claim — that they are made of completely unrelated stuff that cannot influence each other — does not hold up.
The universe is one. Mind and body are two expressions of that oneness, like two instruments playing in the same orchestra. They sound different, they have different roles, but they read from the same score and they play in the same hall.
And perhaps most importantly: the mind cannot exist independently of the body. There is no ghost floating free of the machine. Mind is always rooted in, shaped by, and in constant conversation with the physical world it inhabits. Your thoughts arise in a body that breathes, eats, sleeps, and ages. Honour both halves of that reality, and you are already closer to the truth than a century of strict dualism managed to get.
.