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- XIV. That The Mind Is Not In A Part Of The Body; Wherein Also Is A Distinction Of The Movements Of The Body And Of The Soul .
XIV. That the mind is not in a part of the body; wherein also is a distinction of the movements of the body and of the soul .
2. But since our argument discovered in our vital faculty three different varieties -- one which receives nourishment without perception, another which at once receives nourishment and is capable of perception, but is without the reasoning activity, and a third rational, perfect, and co-extensive with the whole faculty -- so that among these varieties the advantage belongs to the intellectual, -- let no one suppose on this account that in the compound nature of man there are three souls welded together, contemplated each in its own limits, so that one should think man's nature to be a sort of conglomeration of several souls. The true and perfect soul is naturally one, the intellectual and immaterial, which mingles with our material nature by the agency of the senses; but all that is of material nature, being subject to mutation and alteration, will, if it should partake of the animating power, move by way of growth: if, on the contrary, it should fall away from the vital energy, it will reduce its motion to destruction.
3. Thus, neither is there perception without material substance, nor does the act of perception take place without the intellectual faculty.