At the age of eight years old, Descartes was sent to a Jesuit school in La Fleche. Many historians have believed that Descartes had a very poor, permitting him to lay in bed until 10 AM, or until he felt better to get up. Descartes was also fond of being in solitude, giving him more time to think, which is why he left his distractions in Paris. He was a very intelligent and an incredible writer, publishing many of his works, such as the Discourse on The Method, which was about his explanations of reasoning. Not only was he a prolific writer, but Descartes was also a fantastic mathematician, making many major advances in many areas. Unlike other philosophers who backed up their arguments in appeals to God, Descartes trusted in logic, leading him to write Rules for the Direction of the Mind, a method of philosophical and scientific …show more content…
During the Thirty Years’ War he was persuaded to volunteer under the Count de Bucquoy in the army of Bavaria. Descartes lost interest in the army after solidifying his interests in mathematics with the help of Beeckman. In 1621 Descartes finally resigned his commission, spending the next five years travelling while mostly focusing on the study of mathematics. Rene Descartes went to a Jesuit school in La Fleche, indicating that he was Catholic. He considered himself to be a devout Catholic, and wrote the Meditations to defend Catholicism and prove God’s existence. Compared to every other major philosophers, Descartes had less to say about politics, and denied that there could be such thing as a scientific study on politics. He believed that making any changes to the existing political order would be too risky to even try. Descartes believed that in order to solve key questions, one must divide large problems into small understandable sections by way of incisive question, calling it the “Method of Doubts” . Descartes argued that philosophy should be based on the rational method of asking questions. He decided that it was needed to doubt scientific laws that were not certain ,and use the form of deductive reasoning to prove it right. Descartes also viewed the world differently, believing that all of reality could be reduced to mind and