First, he would accept only the pieces of information that he knew to be true. Just because a previous philosopher had stated that some information was true, or because it seemed true at first glance, did not mean that the information was true. The skepticism and methodic doubt first used would weed out what was not true from what was. Then, the problem he was thinking about at the time would be divided up into as many parts as possible. This part would be to keep the mind focused on actually solving the problem, and not getting caught up in another, totally unrelated part of it. An example of this would be asking the question, “What font is used in this paper?” The most important parts of the question are, “font” and “paper,” so everything else shouldn’t be focused on. The answer can be found by those two words alone. Descartes’s refusal to trust previous philosophers influenced his works by allowing him to discard the truth from falsity inherited by
First, he would accept only the pieces of information that he knew to be true. Just because a previous philosopher had stated that some information was true, or because it seemed true at first glance, did not mean that the information was true. The skepticism and methodic doubt first used would weed out what was not true from what was. Then, the problem he was thinking about at the time would be divided up into as many parts as possible. This part would be to keep the mind focused on actually solving the problem, and not getting caught up in another, totally unrelated part of it. An example of this would be asking the question, “What font is used in this paper?” The most important parts of the question are, “font” and “paper,” so everything else shouldn’t be focused on. The answer can be found by those two words alone. Descartes’s refusal to trust previous philosophers influenced his works by allowing him to discard the truth from falsity inherited by