In the philosophy of mind, double-aspect theory is the view that the mental and the physical are two aspects of, or perspectives on, the same substance. It is also called dual-aspect monism, not to be confused with mind–body dualism. The theory's relationship to neutral monism is ill-defined, Neutral monism and the dual-aspect theory share a central claim: there is an underlying reality that is neither mental nor physical. But that is where the agreement stops. Neutral monism has no room for the central feature of the dual-aspect theory: the mental and physical aspects, sides, or properties that characterize the underlying entities of dual-aspect theory. The neutral monist accepts the mental/physical distinction. According to Harald Atmanspacher, "dual-aspect approaches consider the mental and physical domains of reality as aspects, or manifestations, of an underlying undivided reality in which the mental and the physical do not exist as separate domains. In such a framework, the distinction between mind and matter results from an epistemic split that separates the aspects of the underlying reality. Consequently, the status of the psychophysically neutral domain is considered as ontic relative to the mind–matter distinction." Possible double-aspect theorists include: Baruch Spinoza, who believed that Nature or God (Deus sive Natura) has infinite aspects, but that Extension and Mind are the only aspects of which we have knowledge. Arthur Schopenhauer, who considered the fundamental aspects of reality to be Will and Representation. David Bohm, who used implicate and explicate order as a means of displaying dual-aspects. Gustav Fechner Mark Solms, neuropsychoanalyst, for whom dual-aspect monism represents a matrix of ontological juxtaposition of psychoanalytical and neuroscientific knowledge from two distinct perspectives: looking from the inside and looking from the outside. George Henry Lewes Thomas Jay Oord - calls his version "Material-Mental Monism" John Polkinghorne Brian O'Shaughnessy on the dual aspect theory of the Will Thomas Nagel.
Olaf Blanke, Oliver Alan Kannape
Martin Vetterli, Olaf Blanke, Christof Faller, Fritz Menzer, Pär Halje