1 / 19

Intro to Philosophy

Intro to Philosophy. Lesson 6: Descartes, the Rationalists, and Certainty. Rene Descartes. 1596 – 1650 CE La Haye (now Descartes), France Lived mostly in Holland, died in Sweden. “The Father of Modern Philosophy”

locke
Download Presentation

Intro to Philosophy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intro to Philosophy Lesson 6: Descartes, the Rationalists, and Certainty

  2. Rene Descartes • 1596 – 1650 CE • La Haye (now Descartes), France • Lived mostly in Holland, died in Sweden. • “The Father of Modern Philosophy” • “If you would be a real seeker after truth, it is necessary that at least once in your life you doubt, as far as possible, all things.” • Mathematical contributions: • Analytical geometry (x and y axes) • Predecessor of modern calculus

  3. The Father of Modern Philosophy • Perhaps the biggest distinction between “modern” and “ancient” philosophy is the emphasis on method. • The “Flight from Authority” • Descartes changes the questions of philosophy to questions of method instead of substance. • Historically: • The “Renaissance” and “Scientific Revolution” were changing the perspective on common knowledge. • The socio-political structures of Europe were in a time of turmoil and upheaval out of traditional feudalistic states.

  4. De omnibus dubitandumest Descartes turned doubt into a useful tool into a full-blown method of acquiring truth. “…to withhold my assent from matters which are not entirely certain or indubitable.” By assuming that everything that can be doubted should Descartes hopes to find something which cannot be doubted and then build a philosophical understanding of the universe from the implications and consequences of that foundation.

  5. The Method If anything can be doubted—if there is one reason why something could not be true—then he will discard the whole idea. The investigation is aimed at the founding principles of any idea instead of the surface level features or explanatory power it provides.

  6. Sense Perception • Sense perception is problematic because: • Sometimes the things we see are not in accord with actuality (mirages, distance, etc.). • Dreams complicate it further because we have sensory experience in dreams which are, of course, also unreal. • Perceptions, however, must have a source, otherwise we would not be perceiving them, so they are not utterly dismissible, but they are also not something that can be accepted on its own premises.

  7. The Evil Demon Mathematics and geometrical concepts can form the basis of perception. But it is possible that a powerful demon has so arranged the perceptible universe for humans that these cases appear real, but in fact, are not. Thus mathematics is also not the best foundation because it can be doubted.

  8. Existence Existence might provide a touchstone for truth Existence defined in terms of physical presence (space and matter) is doubtable in the same way that our perceptions are doubtable. The alternative is that existence is a mental or non-physical construct.

  9. Cogito, ergo sum In terms of the mind, Descartes is aware that he doubts, and that doubting is a kind of thinking. The function of thinking implies a thinker. “I think, therefore I am.” Existence as non-physical, or mental, is the cornerstone of all future philosophical reflection.

  10. The Soul The ‘I’ that thinks is non-physical. Therefore, the source of thought is non-physical The soul is therefore the thinking thing that exists.

  11. The Exterior World What we grasp of the exterior world is grasped by the mental connections implied between perceiver and perceived. We know something because we mentally grasp its essence and build up from it imaginatively and through sense perception the mental image of it.

  12. God Our thoughts guarantee certain truths, but what guarantees the truth of our thoughts? (Remember the “evil demon”) All effects have a cause Thoughts are also effects that have been caused by something. The thought of something must be caused by something which as at least as much reality as the thought itself. I have an idea of God Only a perfect being is sufficient to cause my idea of God Therefore, God exists.

  13. God, Pt. 2 The idea of a deceitful demon still persists. God is a perfect being. A perfect being would not deceive us. Therefore, we can trust our thoughts as true.

  14. What About Unicorns? • The ability to imagine something, like God or unicorns, does not mean they exist. • God is a perfect being. • A perfect being that does not exist is not a perfect being; or a perfect being exists by definition. • Therefore the ability to think about a perfect being implies that God exist.

  15. External World We possess the innate idea that we are both an immaterial thinking, and physical unthinking, thing (soul & body). This also applies to bodies as a concept (e.g., things that take up space). These innate ideas are confirmed by sense experience in which I do not decide to perceive an external world, but rather it imposes itself upon me despite my will. Thus the external world exists, but not perhaps as we perceive it.

  16. Mind/Body Dualism: the notion that the mind and the body are distinct entities. Interactionism: the idea that soul and body comprise a whole (and are therefore not fully independent). The mind and the body are connected through the brain as the primary communicative tool.

  17. Criticisms The idea of a presupposition-less philosophy is impossible. Eventually we all rely on basic assumptions that are not self-evident. For instance, Descartes’ starting point was the observation that he is thinking, which implies he exists. But nothing, so far, has proved this to be indubitable until he gets to his proofs for God as a guarantor of thought.

  18. Criticisms Sometimes Descartes can be logically inconsistent. The idea that the soul is located in the pineal gland contradicts the idea that the soul is immaterial. The fact that Descartes chose doubt as a method is doubtable… he did not doubt the idea that doubt is the best method (Kierkegaard).

  19. Criticisms Descartes is the historical turning point at which access to truth becomes a purely intellectual exercise with no conditions upon the thinker himself (Michel Foucault) Mathematics and scientific data are objectively true in the sense that we can believe them regardless of our maturity as persons. Mathematical truth, however, is not the fullest definition of truth, and Descartes is problematic because he reduced the acquisition of truth in its fullest sense to the intellectual assent to propositions. Philosophy ever since has in some ways been a search for how to recover the subjective experience of truth.

More Related