| | Robert Malcolm wrote: "In which case those who are unconscious [comotase even?] still posses a functioning brain, but no mind? the mind 'ceases' when sleeping?"
Yes. If the mind is the brain as we are aware of it introspectively, then while some mental functions of the brain continue from time to time during sleep (e.g., dreams), the mind or mental as a phenomenon of which we are introspectively aware does not. However, introspection is possible even while dreaming, so at those times, the mind does exist; but when we're not aware of our brain's conscious processes, mind "ceases" during that period. Thankfully, brain continues even when mind does not.
REB
P.S. -- Naturally, on the intrinsic view of mind as something that exists even when we're not aware of it, mind continues to exist when we're asleep. What the intrinsic view of the mind is pointing to is the potentiality of our brains to engage in conscious functions of which we can be aware. This is parallel to the intrinsic view of redness, which is the potentiality of an apple to engage in the reflection of certain frequencies of light of which we can be aware. But in the primary sense, mind and redness are actual phenomena, not the potentiality to give rise to such phenomena.
If the brain engages in functions and there's no one conscious to introspect it, does it still make a mind? :-) Like the tree in the forest's falling, what the brain does while one is asleep exists only as the potential to be "perceived" (i.e., introspected). The physical event (tree falling and stirring sound waves, brain functioning and stirring electro-chemical impulses) which can be perceived exists, but the conscious content, i.e., the form of awareness of that event, i.e., the sound or the mind, does not.
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