Rene Descartes' "Meditations on First
Philosophy" is written as a firsthand account of thoughts which occurred
to Descartes in the course of six days (one meditation per day) in which he
withdrew from the world in order to find a firm and proven basis for his understanding
of reality.
Descartes opens "Meditations" with an apologetic statement
(perhaps in fear of the Inquisition), explaining that he does not promote heresy
but rather a deeper devotion and a way for skeptics (abounded in Descartes'
times) to come back to religion.
The first meditation of the book starts from this skeptic approach and Descartes
describes how many things he held to be true turned out the be wrong. He sets
his task as finding something which cannot be doubted to be true, arguing that
this thing can be the secure a stable basis for constructing valid knowledge of
the world. This move draws on Descartes' need for an established method to inquire
into reality, discussed in his "Discourse on the Method".
Descartes establishes his skepticism by methodically
exploring the origins of knowledge, doubting them all in order to find out what
remains beyond all doubt (see Descartes' method of doubt). He rules out the senses which can be deceiving, but
also our ability for non-empirical knowledge. To end the debate, Descartes offers
the thought of a malicious
demon which constantly fools us.
Since the demon hypothesis cannot be univocally defeated, Descartes finds himself
in the end of meditation 1 unable to know anything.
Descartes continues to wonder if he himself in fact
exists. He gives his famous answer (the cogito) holding that I for sure
exist. Deceived and erroneous as I may, there is still an "I" who is
wrong and deceived (and in the famous formulation: "I thing therefore I
am").
Existing is good, but Descartes wonders what else I
can know about reality. The following thing after proving the self is
proving that God Exists. in the later chapters of "Meditations" Descartes gives three philosophical proofs of God's existence. The important thing about God for Descartes
is that his benevolent and eternal perfection are a source of validation to all
I know. This knowledge for Descartes is not the dogmatic church but rather the
inner individual capacity for rational thought, a type of methodical
proof-seeking type of thought he calls science.
See also: A summary by chapter of Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy
See also: A summary by chapter of Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy
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