Newtus, I stumbled upon a book in my library that I long forgot about when I was taking a philosophy of mind course. It's called The Mind. The editor is a man named Daniel Robinson.
The Mind (Oxford Readers): Daniel Robinson: 9780192893086: Amazon.com: Books
I honestly think he is one of the greatest teachers. His books read really slow. I'd definitely recommend a pin and or even a highlighter when diving into any of his works. However, this one is a collection of works that he selected on the mind body
problem. He is an agnostic ontologist, so he doesn't take a strict stance on what sort of stuff exists. His prose style is beautiful.
Honestly, this book goes into the ancients like the Upanishads, Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, and so many contemporaries. Robinson, at the beginning of each chapter, summarizes all the arguments. Trims the essays to take out the fluff, and gives a fair share to each side.
It was edited in 1998, so it's not going to have David Chalmers' dual aspect theory or Sharp's embodied cognition theory. However it has classic works in here, and even poetry at the very end which makes one ask, "Is poetry grounded in the viscera?" This book is good for the soul.