РефератыИностранный языкThThe Move From Doubt To Certainty A

The Move From Doubt To Certainty A

The Move From Doubt To Certainty; A Look Essay, Research Paper


The Move from Doubt to Certainty; A Look


at the Theories of Descartes and Locke


Descartes is interested in the certainty of his


existence and the existence of other people and things.


Descartes’ beliefs vary from those of Socrates. Descartes


argues that knowledge is acquired through awareness and


experience. Using this approach, Descartes moves through


doubt to certainty of his existence. He asks himself


various questions about the certainty of his existence and


solves them through clear thought and logic. Using this


method Descartes establishes doubts to be truths and by the


end of the book, he has established that he does indeed


exist. In this paper, I will show how Descartes moves


through doubt to certainty. I will explain how Descartes


uses the cogito, proves the existence of God and what that


means to his existence. I will also discuss the general


rules of truth that Descartes establishes.


In the First Meditation Descartes begins to examine


what is certain and what is doubtful. Descartes wants to


establish that his knowledge is certain and not doubtful.


He states,


…I had accepted many false opinions as being


true, and that what I had based on such insecure


principles could only be most doubtful and


uncertain; so that I had to undertake seriously


once in my life to rid myself of all opinions I


had adopted up to then, and to begin, and to begin


afresh from the foundations, if I wished to


establish something firm and constant in the


sciences.(Descartes 95)


By this Descartes means that he wishes to establish a


foundation for his knowledge based on certainty instead of


doubt. Descartes first looks at the senses. This is


important because the senses are the first thing to cause


doubt. He focuses on the perception of things. He says that


things far from him, in the distance, give him reason to


doubt their certainty, while things that are close to him


are indubitable and he is clear about their certainty.


However, Descartes realizes that dreams pose an


obstacle to his beliefs. Even up close, dreams can be


indubitable. Descartes believes that if a person has had a


dream that was so intense that the person could not


determine it form reality, then they have reason to doubt


objects that are close to us and appear to be indubitable.


In order to resolve this problem, Descartes suggests that


one must examine whether they are dreaming or not.


Descartes realizes that he can not rely on his senses


anymore to give him dubitable truths. He turns to find


something that is indubitable. Descartes tries to use


science as a foundation for truth. He discards physics,


astronomy, and medicine because all three of them rely upon


the senses. “…we shall not be wrong in concluding that


physics, astronomy, and medicine, and all the other sciences


that depend on the consideration of composite things, are


most doubtful and uncertain…”(Descartes 98). However,


Descartes finds that such things as geometry and arithmetic


can be trusted because their are no senses involved. They


are based upon logic.


“…whether I am awake or asleep, two and three


added together always makes five, and a square


always has four sides; and it does not seem


possible that truths so apparent can be suspected


of any falsity or uncertainty”(98).


However, Descartes finds reason to even doubt this.


The only thing that could makes these truths dubitable is


through the intervention by an Evil Deceiver (God).


Descartes cannot prove that God is good and has to


acknowledge that God has the power to deceive. Therefore,


Descartes must doubt all things until he can prove their


certainty. Descartes comes to call this doubt Universal


Doubt.


In the Second Meditation, Descartes examine the


existence of himself. He concludes that if he cannot prove


something exists then how does he know with certainty that


he exists. It is his doubt of his existence that Descartes


uses to prove his existence. Descartes realizes that if he


is able to doubt then he does indeed exists. He take the


approach that, “I think therefore I am” to establish a


certainty that he exists. This idea also known as the


cogito becomes the central point that Descartes will use for


the remaining of his meditations. Descartes affirms his


existence every time he thinks, doubts, or is


persuaded(Descartes 103). Descartes affirms that if there is


an Evil Deceiver then Descartes must exist because in order


for God to deceive, Descartes he must first exist.


Although, Descartes has proved his existence he can


only prove it in the mental capacity. He does not know for


certain that he exists in the physical form. The only way,


at this time, that Descartes can prove the existence of his


body is through his senses. He has already established that


his senses are dubitable and therefore cannot tell him with


certainty that his body exists.


In order to get a better understanding of his


relationship between his body and mind, Descartes melts a


piece of wax. He observes the wax in two different states,


the first in a solid form and the second in a melted form.


He questions how his senses can show him two entirely


different forms of the same substance; yet he knows that the


substance, in both states, although completely different, is


wax. The mind was able to understand the essence of the


wax. Although the senses were not entirely capable of


making the connection between the two forms of wax, the


senses assisted the mind in determining what the substance


was. This experiment proves to be important to Descartes


because he is able to make a link between the senses and the


mind.


Using his experiment, Descartes enters his Third


Meditation using his general rule of truth that “…all


things we conceive very clearly and distinctly are


true”(Descartes 113). However, there is one flaw to his


thoughts. If God is an evil deceiver than this cannot be


true. Descartes proceeds to establish that God is good and


does not deceive.


Descartes uses three points to establish the existence


God. These points are ideas. The first one is adventitious


ideas; those ideas that come from outside experiences. The


second is invented ideas; those that are derived from the


imagination such as sirens and chimera. The final is innate


ideas; those that are within one when they are born.


Descartes uses two more points to further establish that God


exists.


He uses the ideas of “infinite” and “perfect”. These


two ideas, Descartes cannot account for. The only way for


such things to come about would be from an infinite and


perfect being such as God. These ideas have a direct


relationship with God. In order for a finite beings such as


Descartes to have a concept of infinite it must have been


planted there by an infinite being such as God. Descartes


concludes this idea to be true because one cannot derive the


idea of infinite by negating the finite(Descartes 125). An


example of this would be the use of a numb

er line. The


number line will never be able to illustrate infinity. One


could negate every number on a number line and still not


arrive at infinity.


Therefore, Descartes concludes that God does exist and


therefore is not an evil deceiver. Because God has supplied


us with the innate ideas of perfection and infinity, God,


therefore, must be infinite and perfect. Descartes states


that, “Whence it is clear enough that he cannot be a


deceiver, for the natural light teaches us that deceit stems


necessarily from some defect”(Descartes 131). Since God is


perfect he is not an evil deceiver.


It is important to realize that by the time Descartes


has reached his Fourth Meditation he has proved three


important things. The first is that doubt is not universal.


The second is that there is a general rule of truth. The


third is that God exists and cannot be an evil deceiver.


However, Descartes raises a question: If God exists and


cannot be an evil deceiver then why are humans imperfect and


perpetually making errors? Descartes explains this through


the explanation of free will.


Descartes states that God has given all humans free


will. This is the cause of human error. Because we have


free will, humans are able to make choices and decisions


free from the influence of God. Sometimes free will


interferes with God’s ability to help humans and therefore


humans sometimes make poor decisions. If God did not give


humans free will than God would play a direct role in every


decision made by humans. It is because God gives humans


free will that allows for human error.


Descartes Fifth and Sixth Meditations begins with the


establishment of his remaining doubts and the application of


what he has discovered. The first question deals with the


essence of color, mathematical, and geometrical truths. The


second is the existence of people and things. The third is


determining the difference between dreams and reality.


Descartes reiterates that God is not an evil deceiver and


therefore he can clearly conceive something to be true. He


reiterates that if he conceives God correctly then God is


perfect. Imperfection is not compatible with God’s


omnipotence. A non-existent thing cannot be perfect. Even


a non-existent perfect thing is imperfect and all perfect


things are perfect. Descartes also restates that a perfect


thing cannot deceive. With this knowledge, Descartes


proceeds to solve his second problem.


The existence of corporeal(physical things) exist with


certainty. Since God is not an evil deceiver, the idea of


physical things is accurate. Although some perceptions will


still be blurry and may confuse Descartes objects do indeed


exist. He concludes that he just has to be more judgmental


of those perceptions.


But as concerns other things, which are either


only particular, as,, for example, that the sun is


of such a size and shape, etc., or are perceived


less clearly and distinctly, as in the case of


light, sound and pain and so on, although they are


very doubtful and uncertain, nevertheless, from


the fact alone that God is not a deceiver, and has


consequently permitted no falsity in my


opinions…(Descartes 158)


Descartes now knows for certain that he has a body.


Descartes realizes that, “…I have a body, which is ill


disposed when I feel pain, which needs to eat and drink when


I have feelings of hunger or thirst etc.”(Descartes 159).


Because of these feeling that Descartes has and because God


is not an evil deceiver than Descartes is indeed lodged in a


body and is an entire entity with it.


Descartes finally analyzes his third doubt. He now has


the ability to distinguish between being awake and dreaming.


When we are awake, Descartes states, are mind flows in an


uninterrupted, continuous sequence. When we are dreaming,


our mind does not flow in a consistent, and undisturbed


sequence. When a person has a break in the consistency of


events, they are dreaming.


…when I perceive things which I clearly know


both the place they come from and that in which


they are, and the time at which they appear to me,


and when, without any interruption, I can link the


perception I have of them with the whole of the


rest of my life, I am fully assured that it is not


in sleep that I am perceiving them but while I am


awake(Descartes 168)


After establishing certainty to his doubts, Descartes


states, “And I must reject all the doubts of the last few


days as hyperbolic and ridiculous, particularly the general


uncertainty about sleep, which I could not distinguish for a


wakeful state…”(Descartes 168). With that Descartes


concludes his meditations and uncertainties.


Although Descartes makes a sound argument there were


some people that disagreed with his theories. One of those


people was John Locke. The beliefs of Locke, who was an


empiricists, were similar to those of the Sophist during the


time of Socrates. He argued that when a person was born


their mind was empty. A person obtained knowledge through


experiences. He also felt that if a person misinterpreted


an experience it could lead to doubt or skepticism. Locke


tries to prove Descartes wrong by saying that there are no


innate ideas. He states that by understanding our own mind


we can deter doubt.


Locke proposes three separate possibilities about


truth. The first is that there is no such thing as truth.


The second is that there is no way to obtain truth. The


third reason is that we can understand implied things but


not be absolutely certain about them. Locke believed that


we never deal with certainty and everyday we deal with


possibility.


…and it will be unpardonable, as well as


childish peevishness, if we undervalue the


advantage of our knowledge and neglect to improve


it to ends for which it has given us, because


there are some things that are set out of the


reach of it.(Locke 57).


Locke states that not all innate ideas come from


“natural ability”. He says that a universal consent does


not prove innate ideas. They could arise from experience.


Locke supports this theory by saying that innate ideas are


neither in children nor idiots. If these ideas were innate


then everyone would have them. He further states that


mathematical truths are learned from experience and are not


innate ideas.


Descartes and Locke were two men with completely


different views. They each set out to prove their own


existence in a different fashion. Although they do not


agree with each other, each one of them presents a clear and


intelligent argument. It is these arguments that have


encouraged the human race to consider the possibility of


existence long after the death of Descartes and Locke.


People will continue to debate their viewpoints for years to


come and maybe, one day we will know the meaning of


existence.


Descartes, Rene. Discourse on Method and the Meditations.


Trans. F.E. Sutcliffe. New York: Penguin, 1996.


Locke, John. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. ed.


Roger Woolhouse. New York: Penguin, 1997.

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