Unlike considerations emanating from theologians as to how proof that their God, defined as an active being by itself, was not an invention, the demonstration Descartes does regarding the proof of the existence of God and therefore the human error is simple: it shows
God from man. Descartes says, "I would not have the idea of an infinite substance, me as a finite being, if it had been placed in me by some substance that was truly infinite."
This is the evidence of the proof by the effects. The cause is proved by the effects. Every effect must have a cause of the same order, and therefore the fact that man has a sense of infinite cannot have its cause in man himself as it is finished. …show more content…
Descartes deepens his proof of the existence of God by pointing out that among all his thoughts there is one that has a special status: the idea of God. This is the idea of an infinite and
perfect …show more content…
These qualities belong, in reality, only to our consciousness, and therefore our mind. The essential role of divine truth is therefore a well- founded of science clear ideas. But even there, it is important to clarify its strict extension.
Therefore, in the fourth Meditation, Descartes seems to take a moment on his own objection that can address all dogmatism rationalists: if our thinking is, as such, ordained to the true, how is it that we were wrong? Or, Descartes said, "If I hold God everything I own, and if He does not give me the power to fail, it seems that I must never deceive me." Sometimes, it is a fact that I am wrong, emphasizes Descartes. This preceding statement, for Descartes, reveals in certain way the human error that underlies the proof of the existence of God.
Where are the human errors come from? Descartes is categorical: any error is by definition an error of judgment, and should be attributed to the will that judges. It is not for sensation, for example - there are no errors of the senses. Nor, the error only affects the