Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain is a book by neurologist 
Antonio R. Damasio, in which the author presents the argument that emotion and 
reason are not separate but, in fact, are quite dependent upon one another.

Damasio argues that the body is the genesis of thought. The philosopher René 
Descartes developed a method of reasoning based on the indisputable observation 
that if we think, we must exist. However, Damasio examines the physiological 
processes that contribute to the functioning of the mind and therefore proposes 
the idea that thinking is inherent to a body in which no spirit exists. The 
fundamental difference in argument situates itself in that thought is a 
physiological function, based on anatomy making the statement "I think, 
therefore I am" a repetition. It essentially becomes "I am, therefore I am" 
when Damasio's principle of the body-mind rather than dualism is applied. This 
presents the reason why the work is titled Decartes' Error.

Damasio explores in depth the famous case of Phineas Gage. While Gage's 
intelligence remained intact after his brain was damaged in an 1848 accident, 
Damasio believes that Gage's ability to reason and make rational decisions 
became severely handicapped because his emotions could no longer be engaged in 
the process. Damasio uses this and other brain-damage cases to develop his 
thesis on emotion and its relationship to human activity. He argues that 
rationality stems from our emotions, and that our emotions stem from our bodily 
senses. The state of the mind, or feeling, is merely a reflection of the state 
of the body, and feeling is an indispensable ingredient of rational thought.

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