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René Descartes March 31, 1596 - Feb 11, 1650 Often called the father of modern science. He established a new, clear way of thinking about philosophy and science by rejecting all ideas based on assumptions or emotional beliefs and accepting only those ideas which could be proved by or systematically deduced from direct observation.

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Old 07-12-2008, 08:24 AM
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René Descartes - A brief introduction

René Descartes
Initiator of Modern Thought

Life

Rene Descartes, also known as Renatus Cartesius was born near Tours on 31 march 1596 a son to a noble and moderatley wealthy family. He was educated by Jesuits and showed early signs of attachments to intellectual pursuits; mathematics in particular. He studied at the universities of Franeker and Leiden, and taught a few years at the univerity of Utrecht.

On leaving school Descartes lived a few years in Paris, in a way appropriate to his rank and income. As he becamoe more and more engrossed in his studies he found the social life so distracting that he took a job in the Bavarian army, thus ensuring leisure and quiet for his 'meditations'. This was at the beginning of the thirty year war.

In 1633 Descartes abandoned his plans to publish 'Treatise on the World' due to the condemnation of Galileo by the roman catholic church. In 1643 his work was condemned by the univesity of Utrecht.

Descartes died on 11th of February 1650 in Stockholm, Sweden. He had been invited there to teach the queen Christina of Sweden. Some say that he died due to pneumona because he was fond of working in bed untill noon. The sudden shock of having to get up at 5 a.m. due to Christina's demands may have been too much for him.

In 1663 the Pope placed Descartes' works on the 'Index of Prohibited Books'.

Cartesian Method

When he was 23, Descartes wrote his Discourse on Method, expressing his reflections on 'the foundations of a wonderfull science'. This was not a body of knowledge, but a way of investigating things. The rules of which were:

The first was to accept nothing as true which I did not clearly recognize to be so: that is to say, carefully to avoid precipitation and prjudice in judgements, and to accept in them nothing more than what was presented to my mind so clearly and distinctly that I could have no occasion to doubt it.
The second was to devide up each of the difficulties which I examined into as many parts as possible, and as seemed requisite in order that it might be resolved in the best manner possible.
The third was to carry on my reflections in due order, commencing with objects that were the most simple and easy to understand, in order to rise little by little, or by degrees, to knowledge of the most complex, assuming an order, even if a little fictitious one, among those which do not follow a natural sequence relatively to one another.
The last was in all cases to make enumerations so complete and reviews so general that I should be certain of having omitted nothing.

Out of this short fragment from 'Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting the Reason, and Searching for Truth in the Sciences'; a treatise on Descartes' way to obtaining 'true' knowledge through meditations (pure thought in Descartes' words) it is easy to come to Descartes' most famous quote:

Cogito, ergo Sum

This means: 'I think, therefore I am'. The reason Descartes concluded that he (at least) thought was because he could doubt everything, even thought, but when doubting he was still thinking. A summary of his philosophy could be 'Dubito, ergo Cogito, ergo Sum': I doubt, therefore I think, therefore I am.

The problem with Descartes' philosophies so far is that it leads to a certain skepticism concerning everything which can is percieved. For what can be doubted can be disregarded. This skepticism leads to a form of solipsism in the sense that any human cannot be sure about anything except the existence of oneself. All perceptions might be generated by the thoughts of the individual, making it so that it seems likely that only that individual exists in reality.

In Descartes' definitions consciousness (that which cannot be doubted; thought) is that which can be acted upon. That leaves the question what is acting upon it. The answer to that is very simple: God; thus solving the solipsistic problem. However, God being perfect and cause of everything - including one's thoughts - could not be a deceiver (Evil Daemon). Therefore any thoughts correspond to an external reality (or most of them do); thereby also overthrowing skepticism.

Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz are known as the three great (continental) rationalists; traditionally set out against the three great (British) empiricists Locke, Hume and Berkeley.

The Pineal Gland

An important result of Descartes' method is the seperation of thinking and extension, reason and body. This is done by the 'Cartesian Doubt'. The body can be denied, but thought (doubt itself) cannot. Descartes concluded that if the existence of A can be denied, but the existence of B cannot, then A and B are distinct things. Therefore a human must be, as Plato held, really two things: a space-occupying body and a non-spatial soul.

The body is like a 'machine'(1) to him, made up out of bones, nerves, muscles, veines, blood and skin that even if there were no mind in it, it would not cease to move in all the ways that it does at present when it is not moved under the direction of the will, nor consequently with the aid of the mind.

The problem with this phiolosphy is the question how the two seperate things (reason and extension) interact. Descartes' solution to this problem was that the soul pushed against a part of the body, the pineal glad, thus 'controlling' the body. This theory was found to be incompatible with the fundamental physical law of the conservation of momentum.

Denial of interaction

Because of the pineal gland theory being incompatible with the law of conservation of momentum some alternative theories were formulated. These are two of the most interesting (and holding) theories of denial of the mind-body interaction.

Arnold Geulincx (1625-1669) propounded th etheory known as Occasionalism. The theory holds that God has created the workings of the mind and the workings of the body as two seperate 'clocks', strings of cause and effect, being timed so perfectly that any occorance in one of the two occurs simaltaniously with an occurance in the other. No interaction between the two exists in this theory.

Nicholas Malebranche (1638-1715) went even further, in saying that all causality does not exist, except in God. God is the only real cause in the universe, who directly causes every thing and every event, in such a way that it seems to us as if these events produce eachother.

Bibliography

1618. Compendium Musicae. A treatise on music theory and the aesthetics of music written for Descartes' early collaborator Isaac Beeckman.
1626–1628. Regulae ad directionem ingenii (Rules for the Direction of the Mind). Incomplete. First published posthumously in 1684. The best critical edition, which includes an early Dutch translation, is edited by Giovanni Crapulli (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966).
1630–1633. Le Monde (The World) and L'Homme (Man). Descartes' first systematic presentation of his natural philosophy. Man was first published in Latin translation in 1662; The World in 1664.
1637. Discours de la méthode (Discourse on the Method). An introduction to the Essais, which include the Dioptrique, the Météores and the Géométrie.
1637. La Géométrie (Geometry). Descartes' major work in mathematics. There is an English translation by Michael Mahoney (New York: Dover, 1979).
1641. Meditationes de prima philosophia (Meditations on First Philosophy), also known as Metaphysical Meditations. In Latin; a French translation, probably done without Descartes' supervision, was published in 1647. Includes six Objections and Replies. A second edition, published the following year, included an additional objection and reply, and a Letter to Dinet.
1644. Principia philosophiae (Principles of Philosophy), a Latin textbook at first intended by Descartes to replace the Aristotelian textbooks then used in universities. A French translation, Principes de philosophie by Claude Picot, under the supervision of Descartes, appeared in 1647 with a letter-preface to Queen Christina of Sweden.
1647. Notae in programma (Comments on a Certain Broadsheet). A reply to Descartes' one-time disciple Henricus Regius.
1647. The Description of the Human Body. Published posthumously.
1648. Responsiones Renati Des Cartes… (Conversation with Burman). Notes on a Q&A session between Descartes and Frans Burman on 16 April 1648. Rediscovered in 1895 and published for the first time in 1896. An annotated bilingual edition (Latin with French translation), edited by Jean-Marie Beyssade, was published in 1981 (Paris: PUF).
1649. Les passions de l'âme (Passions of the Soul). Dedicated to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia.
1657. Correspondence. Published by Descartes' literary executor Claude Clerselier. The third edition, in 1667, was the most complete; Clerselier omitted, however, much of the material pertaining to mathematics.

Notes
(1) During the renaissance and the enlightenment the opinion that animals (and sometimes man) were mere machines; soulless, was held. The soul was what seperated man from animal, or individual from his fellow man. I a way these opinions are still held in medical science. The body can be 'repaired' as any machine.

Sources
A New History of Philosophy: From Descartes to Rawls - Wallace I matson
Meditationes
Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting One's Reason and of Seeking Truth
Wikipedia


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Old 07-13-2008, 12:42 AM
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Re: René Descartes - A brief introduction

[quote=Arjen;18212]René Descartes
Initiator of Modern Thought


Out of this short fragment from 'Meditationes'; a treatise on Descartes' way to obtaining 'true' knowledge through meditations (pure thought in Descartes' words) it is easy to come to Descartes' most famous quote:

Dubito, ergo Cogito, ergo Sum

This means: 'I doubt, therefore I think, therefore I am'.



Actually, this quote never appears in the Meditations, or any place else in Descartes I know of. But, Cogito ergo Sum does appear in the Discourse on Method. It means, I think, therefore I am. Descartes's argument is, of course, that he could not think (nor do anything else, for that matter) unless he existed. When he was asked by the philosopher, Pierre Gassendi, why thinking was so important, for after all, "I walk therefore I am" was also a valid argument, Descartes replied that was true, but that he could be absolutely certain that he thought, but since walking was a bodily event, and he had already argued that he could doubt he had a body, it was not certain that he could walk. He pointed out that he could be certain he thought because doubting was a form of thinking, so that if he tried to doubt that he thought he would not succeed, since doubting was a form of thinking, and if he doubted he thought he would still be thinking.
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Old 07-13-2008, 06:14 AM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

Thank you Kennethamy, I messed up on that one. In my own defense I would like to say it was the last part I 'wrote' one day before going to work and I was planning to check 'details' later. I guess I just continued from there. Usually I am more precise and I will try to be in the future.

I am hoping you can show me a source which shows the link to Gassendi by the way. I did not know of the link and I am most interested.
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Old 07-13-2008, 10:03 AM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

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Originally Posted by Arjen View Post

I am hoping you can show me a source which shows the link to Gassendi by the way. I did not know of the link and I am most interested.
No problem. Look into "Objections and Replies". I forget which number Gassendi's is. (After the Meditations were written, Descartes sent the mss. around to a number of philosophers and theologians. They wrote their criticisms and objections, and then, Descartes wrote replies to them.They are very good, and important for understanding Descartes. They are in print)
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Old 07-13-2008, 10:22 AM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

Do you know the feeling of wanting to check all sorts of information, but never coming around to everything? I am having that feeling now. I will try to get hold of a copy nonetheless though.

Might I say that I very greatfull for this information. I think I am going to enjoy those objects very much, let alone the replies.
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Old 07-14-2008, 01:12 AM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

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Originally Posted by Arjen View Post
Do you know the feeling of wanting to check all sorts of information, but never coming around to everything? I am having that feeling now. I will try to get hold of a copy nonetheless though.

Might I say that I very greatfull for this information. I think I am going to enjoy those objects very much, let alone the replies.
I am sure you will. If you are really interested in Descartes, the "Objections and Replies" is indispensable. Those by Gassendi, Arnauld, and Hobbes, are the best, but they are all worth-reading.
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Old 07-14-2008, 04:03 AM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

I am thinking of a form of scholasticism and perhaps our forum activities are that as well.
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Old 07-22-2008, 02:54 PM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

Really good work Arjen, a nice introduction.. the first time i read it i got the wrong impression that Descartes was a skeptic, maybe just in the way you worded "the problem with Descartes philosophies so far is that it leads to skepticism...", when that was just his method, not his conclusion. (I realise you explained his way out briefly in the next paragraph, but i must admit i missed it the first time)..

Descartes wasn't a skeptic at all of course, his aim was to prove the truth of things and legitimise natural history by anchoring it into an a priori truth that couldn't be doubted. This foundation was the Cogito and it was his method of achieving this aim, not the conclusion. I know you mentioned this briefly, but i can see how someone could misread it. If there's one major point of Descartes that i take away, it's how he believes that 'clear and distinct perceptions' give access to truths about the world, which is the foundation of rationalism. If rationalists believe that reason and logic can discover truth, then they need a keystone truth that is above an empirical observation, and the Cogito is that one fundamental truth.
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Old 07-22-2008, 03:43 PM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

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Originally Posted by dominant_monad View Post
Really good work Arjen, a nice introduction.. the first time i read it i got the wrong impression that Descartes was a skeptic, maybe just in the way you worded "the problem with Descartes philosophies so far is that it leads to skepticism...", when that was just his method, not his conclusion. (I realise you explained his way out briefly in the next paragraph, but i must admit i missed it the first time)..

Descartes wasn't a skeptic at all of course, his aim was to prove the truth of things and legitimise natural history by anchoring it into an a priori truth that couldn't be doubted. This foundation was the Cogito and it was his method of achieving this aim, not the conclusion. I know you mentioned this briefly, but i can see how someone could misread it. If there's one major point of Descartes that i take away, it's how he believes that 'clear and distinct perceptions' give access to truths about the world, which is the foundation of rationalism. If rationalists believe that reason and logic can discover truth, then they need a keystone truth that is above an empirical observation, and the Cogito is that one fundamental truth.
But how do you tell whether your perception is clear and distinct?
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Old 07-22-2008, 04:05 PM
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Re: [Descartes]A brief introduction

Quote:
Originally Posted by dominant_monad View Post
Really good work Arjen, a nice introduction.. the first time i read it i got the wrong impression that Descartes was a skeptic, maybe just in the way you worded "the problem with Descartes philosophies so far is that it leads to skepticism...", when that was just his method, not his conclusion. (I realise you explained his way out briefly in the next paragraph, but i must admit i missed it the first time)..
I was afraid of that happening. I had hoped people would ask or re-read (as you have done). It seemed more important at the time to at least write the introduction and mention most important facts than it being totally clear. I think some philosophies need more then a short introduction to become clear (as well as noticed fully). I am planning on writing a more detailed piece on Descartes' method as a part of a wider study I am doing at this point in my life. The crownpiece will be an article on the combining and progressing of method examined through several philosophers from ancient Greece to modernday philosophy.

Quote:
Descartes wasn't a skeptic at all of course, his aim was to prove the truth of things and legitimise natural history by anchoring it into an a priori truth that couldn't be doubted. This foundation was the Cogito and it was his method of achieving this aim, not the conclusion. I know you mentioned this briefly, but i can see how someone could misread it. If there's one major point of Descartes that i take away, it's how he believes that 'clear and distinct perceptions' give access to truths about the world, which is the foundation of rationalism. If rationalists believe that reason and logic can discover truth, then they need a keystone truth that is above an empirical observation, and the Cogito is that one fundamental truth.
Note that this a priori truth consists of God, and God only. To say anything less would mean the pyre of the inquisition.

I follow you in the sense that rationalists think that thought comes before observations, but not in the sense that this is apriori according to Descartes. That was Kant, who based himself on Descartes greatly, as well as Spinoza by the way.

Indeed the cornerstone of Descartes' method and thereby the cornerstone of his philsophies. As said I am planning to elaborate in a second article.

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