Chapter 2: Reality Modern Metaphysics: Descartes

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Chapter 2: Reality Modern Metaphysics: Descartes Introducing Philosophy, 10th edition Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen Higgins, and Clancy Martin

René Descartes (1596-1650) French philosopher, considered the “father of modern philosophy” Raised in the French aristocracy, educated at the Jesuit College of La Fléche, skilled in the classics, law, and medicine Decided these fell far short of proper knowledge and so turned to modern science and mathematics First book (unpublished): defense of Copernicus

While still young, discovered connections between algebra and geometry and used this as a model for the rest of his career Basing the principles of philosophy and theology on a similar mathematical basis, was able to develop a method in philosophy that could be carried through according to individual reason and that no longer depended upon appeal to authorities whose insights and methods were questionable

In Discourse on Method (1637), he set out these basic principles, which he had already used in Meditations on First Philosophy (not published until 1641) to reexamine the foundations of philosophy He sought a basic premise from which, as in a geometrical proof, he could deduce all those principles that could be known with certainty

Idealism The view that what the world is made of, the ultimate reality of things, is the mind At the center of Descartes’ metaphysics is Aristotle’s conception of substance: “a thing existing in such a manner that it has need of no other thing in order to exist” He divides the world into three sorts of substances: God, the mind, and physical, material being

A Proof of the Existence of the World Rests on the presumption of God’s goodness Because God is rational and good, we can trust our limited knowledge of the world But because the world depends on God, there is no danger that science will leave us with a godless universe

Mind and Body Two substances are distinct and independent “Cartesian dualism” allows for both religion and new science They cannot contradict each other because they apply to different domains The mind is free and explained by theology, and the body is explained by science

Mental and Physical Substance Descartes claims that everything is either a substance or an attribute of substance and that a substance can be thought of independently Extension in space defines physical substance Mental substance is unextended and is defined by its freedom

Ideas The link between the mental and the physical Because of innate ideas, we know certain propositions to be true for certain

A Problem The relationship between the substances: How do the mind and body interact with each other, granting that substances are independent and distinct? This seems logically impossible because interaction entails interdependence, and substances are supposed to be independent