Rene Descartes: A Great Thinker of the Western World “I think therefore I am” are the words that come to mind as we encounter the subject of Descartes. We see man full of knowledge and ideas ready to expand and break free. His interest in knowledge and the acquisition of truth itself brought him to doubt all around him‚ including God and his very own existence. He is even considered to be the Father of Modern philosophy because he guided the thinkers of his time to deviate from the Scholastic-Aristotelian
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Descartes’ Fourth Meditation: Account of Falsity and its Relation to Clear and Distinct Perception This paper will address how René Descartes‚ the “Father of Modern Philosophy”‚ explains the nature of falsity in an attempt to prove his claim that “everything that we clearly and distinctly perceive is true” (Descartes 11). This paper sets out to prove that within his “Fourth Meditation” Descartes examines and diagnoses the source of error and falsity; it will also examine his successfulness
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Descartes notion of the mind/body problem in relation to Free Will Descartes took an extreme skeptical position by asking‚ “What is impossible to doubt‚ even when trying to believe that everything is false?” His answer was: "I think‚ therefore I am"; which is Descartes ’ most famous one-liner and is the one that explains his understanding of the dualism argument. The term ‘dualism’ has a variety of uses in the history of thought. In general‚ the idea is that‚ for some particular domain‚ there are
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In the second meditation of his Meditations on First Philosophy‚ Rene Descartes argues that it is possible to doubt the existence of the body‚ while it is impossible to doubt the mind. Following this logic‚ the mind must exist while the body may simply be a product of elaborate deception. He comes to this conclusion through relentlessly doubting every aspect of his existence while simultaneously assuming the presence of a “very powerful and very cunning” deceiver who “ever employs his ingenuity of
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Rene Descartes Descartes never did a stroke of useful work in his life. At various times he described himself as a solider‚ a mathematician‚ a thinker and a gentleman. The last comes closest to describing his attitude toward life as well as his social status. Descartes was indisputably the most original philosopher to appear in the fifteen centuries following the death of Aristotle. Rene Descartes was born March 31‚ 1596‚ in the small town of La Haye‚ in the Creuse Valley
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Descartes’ Skeptical Argument and Reponses by Bouwsma and Malcolm In this essay‚ I will examine Rene Descartes’ skeptical argument and responses by O.K. Bouwsma and Norman Malcolm. I intend to prove that while both Bouwsma and Malcolm make points that refute specific parts of Descartes’ argument in their criticisms‚ neither is sufficient in itself to refute the whole. In order to understand Descartes’ argument and its sometimes radical ideas‚ one must have at least a general idea of
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Epistemology is the study of how we acquire knowledge and justify our beliefs. Descartes promoted a rationalist epistemology through his masterwork Meditations on First Philosophy (1641)‚ which were designed to build a theory of knowledge from the ground up. Rationalism states that knowledge is acquired through the use of reason. In contrast‚ John Locke promoted empiricist epistemology through his Essay Concerning Human Understanding. Empiricism is any view which bases our knowledge‚ or the materials
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In Meditations IV‚ Rene Descartes defends God against the accusation that He is responsible for the errors and mishaps of human beings. Descartes argues that God granted human beings the ability choose‚ i.e.‚ free will‚ and it is poor use of said free will that is responsible for human error‚ not God. In his later publication‚ Principles of Philosophy‚ he continues his vehement defense of God but includes a significant addition in that undermines this position. I will argue that although Meditations
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were all those I had subsequently built upon them." (pp.1) The First Meditation opens with Renee Descartes reflecting on all the things that he has been mistaken about‚ and all his beliefs that were built on those false ones. As a result‚ he somehow feels the need to reexamine everything he has believed in the past‚ and has set aside some time in front of the fireplace to do it. Renee Descartes claims him self to be "The Meditator" and decides that in order to determine truth from falsity he should
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put forward by Rene Descartes in his Meditations on First Philosophy (1641). Descartes supposed that the world was made up of mental and physical substances that were fundamentally distinct. Whereas physical substances were thought to be spatial and accessible to every being in the material world‚ mental substances were indivisible‚ private and not restricted to space so that humans could even image themselves existing without a body. Although completely different‚ Descartes argued that mind and
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