The author cites Spinoza's belief that 'mind and body exist in pre-established coordination' most likely in order to
A.
prove that Descartes confused the true distinction between consciousness and extension
B.
suggest the logical assumption behind Spinoza's embrace of dualism
C.
lay the groundwork for psychophysical parallelism's rejection of occasionalism
D.
deny that any outside entity could be responsible for both mental and physical events
E.
establish why he believed mental events could not determine physical motions