Thursday, November 28, 2019
Descartes Essays (4719 words) - Epistemologists, Metaphysicians
  Descartes         How does Descartes try to extricate himself from the sceptical   doubts that he has raised? Does he succeed?      by Tom Nuttall      [All page references and quotations from the Meditations are   taken from the 1995 Everyman edition]      In the Meditations, Descartes embarks upon what Bernard Williams   has called the project of 'Pure Enquiry' to discover certain,   indubitable foundations for knowledge. By subjecting everything   to doubt Descartes hoped to discover whatever was immune to it.   In order to best understand how and why Descartes builds his   epistemological system up from his foundations in the way that he   does, it is helpful to gain an understanding of the intellectual   background of the 17th century that provided the motivation for   his work.      We can discern three distinct influences on Descartes, three   conflicting world-views that fought for prominence in his day.   The first was what remained of the mediaeval scholastic   philosophy, largely based on Aristotelian science and Christian   theology. Descartes had been taught according to this outlook   during his time at the Jesuit college La Flech_ and it had an   important influence on his work, as we shall see later. The   second was the scepticism that had made a sudden impact on the   intellectual world, mainly as a reaction to the scholastic   outlook. This scepticism was strongly influenced by the work of   the Pyrrhonians as handed down from antiquity by Sextus   Empiricus, which claimed that, as there is never a reason to   believe p that is better than a reason not to believe p, we   should forget about trying to discover the nature of reality and   live by appearance alone. This attitude was best exemplified in   the work of Michel de Montaigne, who mockingly dismissed the   attempts of theologians and scientists to understand the nature   of God and the universe respectively. Descartes felt the force of   sceptical arguments and, while not being sceptically disposed   himself, came to believe that scepticism towards knowledge was   the best way to discover what is certain: by applying sceptical   doubt to all our beliefs, we can discover which of them are   indubitable, and thus form an adequate foundation for knowledge.   The third world-view resulted largely from the work of the new   scientists; Galileo, Copernicus, Bacon et al. Science had finally   begun to assert itself and shake off its dated Aristotelian   prejudices. Coherent theories about the world and its place in   the universe were being constructed and many of those who were   aware of this work became very optimistic about the influence it   could have. Descartes was a child of the scientific revolution,   but felt that until sceptical concerns were dealt with, science   would always have to contend with Montaigne and his cronies,   standing on the sidelines and laughing at science's pretenses to   knowledge. Descartes' project, then, was to use the tools of the   sceptic to disprove the sceptical thesis by discovering certain   knowledge that could subsequently be used as the foundation of a   new science, in which knowledge about the external world was as   certain as knowledge about mathematics. It was also to hammer the   last nail into the coffin of scholasticism, but also, arguably,   to show that God still had a vital r_le to play in the discovery   of knowledge.      Meditation One describes Descartes' method of doubt. By its   conclusion, Descartes has seemingly subjected all of his beliefs   to the strongest and most hyberbolic of doubts. He invokes the   nightmarish notion of an all-powerful, malign demon who could be   deceiving him in the realm of sensory experience, in his very   understanding of matter and even in the simplest cases of   mathematical or logical truths. The doubts may be obscure, but   this is the strength of the method - the weakness of criteria for   what makes a doubt reasonable means that almost anything can   count as a doubt, and therefore whatever withstands doubt must be   something epistemologically formidable.      In Meditation Two, Descartes hits upon the indubitable principle   he has been seeking. He exists, at least when he thinks he   exists. The cogito (Descartes' proof of his own existence) has   been the source of a great deal of discussion ever since   Descartes first formulated it in the 1637 Discourse on Method,   and, I believe, a great deal of misinterpretation (quite possibly    
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