РефератыИностранный языкWhWhat Is Descartes Trying To Achieve In

What Is Descartes Trying To Achieve In

The Meditations And What Is The Relationship Between T Essay, Research Paper


What


Descartes is trying to achieve in the Meditations can be simply


described as trying to find the truth. Although in the printed dedication at


the start of the work he explains that his core goal is to prove the existence


of God, the truth he is seeking for is more fundamental than even that: he


wants to find out which premises and ideas, if any, are able to be indubitably known.


In short, he sets out to find out if there is anything he can be certain of.


The terms ?knowledge? and ?certainty? are used interchangeably in everyday


life, many philosophers consider them to be separate concepts entirely.


Moreover, as Magee has pointed out, Descartes considered that ?certainty? and


?truth? to also be different ideas. The relationship between the goal of


Descartes? project and certainty will therefore have to be considered, in order


to assess how effective what he is trying to achieve, and whether he can


actually achieve it. During


the time Descartes was writing, the sciences were unified, and were closely


connected to philosophy and theology. Cottingham comments that the prevailing


view was that ?knowledge was a profoundly difficult and complex business? and


that the search for truth was ?a laborious attempt to uncover occult powers and


forces?. Others felt that all the world?s truths could somehow be solved by one


individual thinking alone, and extreme sceptics who were sceptical about the


possibility of find any truths at all[1].


Descartes himself can be said to fit in the second category, and indeed was


contemptuous of the idea that knowledge could be gained from books, as shown in


part two of his Discourse on Method: ?I thought that the sciences found in books?do not approach so near to the


truth as the simple reasoning which a man of common sense can quite naturally


carry out respecting the things which come immediately before him.? This


flows very much from Descartes? opinion that the individual can work to a much


greater degree of perfection than a group of people. All that matters is that


the enquirer uses the right method, and the mysteries of the universe should,


ultimately come clear. In the Discourse on Method, Descartes comments


that education corrupts the abilities of the human mind to do this:??I


thought that since we have all been children before men and since it has for


long fallen to us to be governed by our appetites and our teachers (who often


contradicted one another and none of whom perhaps counselled us always for the


best), it is almost impossible that our judgements should be so excellent or


solid as they should have been had we had complete

use of our reason since our


birth, and had we been guided by its means alone.?This has been quoted at length for the


fact that it illustrates some of the reasoning behind the method he adopts in


the Meditations. In order to discover what he can indubitably know,


which is, as mentioned above, the major goal of the Meditations, it is


necessary to clear the mind of all knowledge previously known or assumed. Not


only does he consider himself to have been misled by secondary sources of


knowledge, he includes in this anything he has cause to doubt. The ?Method of


Doubt?, as his method has been termed, is his technique for achieving his goal. Descartes removes from his mind anything


that he might have reason to doubt. By stripping away all that can be doubted,


he is trying to find if there is any ?clear and distinct? idea whose certainty


is indubitable. He describes it as a way to pre-empt any criticisms from


sceptics, and thus assure its certainty to his mind. However, as was said in the opening


paragraph of this essay, certainty is considered by some to be a different


concept to that of knowledge. Certainty is an internal state of the mind ? one


can be certain that something is true, but this may not bear any relation to


the actual state of the real world. One may be certain that the next bus goes


to Cowley, when in fact the next one goes to Headington. It is a belief more


than a fact. Knowledge, on the other hand, relates to the external world. In


this way, it can be argued that Descartes? ?Method of Doubt? prevents knowledge


from ever being brought into consideration: if something relates to the


external world, it is not incorrigible, and thus must be rejected. Although he uses his Method in the work


and comes to the conclusion that the only thing he can be certain of is his


existence, he follows it immediately in what has been described as a large


u-turn by introducing the idea of God. Having said that he can be sure of


nothing, he uses a circular argument to prove that God exists, which leaves him


open to criticism. One of the aims of the work was to find evidence for God,


but this causes one to wonder if, using Descartes? Method, one can be certain


of His existence. Certainty might be considered to be an


incorrigible belief.? Descartes, in the Mediations,


is trying to use his method in order to see if any of his beliefs could be described


as indubitable, or certain. He also wants to find a proof for God, which


ultimately conflicts with these aims. Descartes, though, uses both the Discourse


and the Meditations, as a way to test his Method in order to establish


its effectiness. [1] See Magee, The


Great Philosophers, page 81 for examples


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