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Introduction to Philosophy



    Descartes
Descartes (1596-1650 AD)
 General Biography:
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kIatZjJ
  s5I
 3 Minute philosophy: Descartes
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHihkR
  wisbE
Revised, 1/7/07



            René Descartes
            (1596-1650 AD)




                     Meditations on First Philosophy
                                        (1641)
Background

              Descartes‟ Problem
      The problem of skepticism (D concentrates on 2
       types of skepticism)

       – General skepticism: There are NO indubitable (not
         doubtable) beliefs or propositions.

       – Skepticism concerning the existence & nature of the
         “external world”: The existence and nature of the
         “external world” cannot be known.
       – The Matrix:
         http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEr8hnvzeHU
The overall structure of D‟s
      Meditations
       (next slide)
General          Cogito (existence of the “I”)
             (Med. I)                                     (Med. II)
                                     Mind-Body Dualism
Skepticism                                      (That piece of wax)

                                              God (no deceiver)
             External                            1. My idea of God (III)
             World                               2. My contingent
             (Meds. III-VI)                         existence (III)
                                                 3. The ontological
                                                    argument (again) (V)
Meditation I



Radical (General) Skepticism
Descartes‟ “Foundationalism”

  Epistemological Foundations & Superstructure

                          Superstructural
                              Beliefs
                           (also false?)


      False                   False                   False
   Foundational            Foundational            Foundational
      Belief                  Belief                  Belief
If the underlying foundations of our beliefs are false, then it is
possible that all of our beliefs are false too!
D‟s program of radical doubt

 Treat any belief that is to the slightest extent
  uncertain & subject to doubt just as though
  it is obviously false.
 Accept only those beliefs that are
  completely certain and indubitable.
 Work on the foundations of my beliefs.


         What are the underlying foundations of my beliefs?
Foundational Beliefs
              (common assumptions we make)



   Naïve Empiricism: True beliefs are acquired
    through sense experience.

   My beliefs are not products of insanity.

   My beliefs are not products of my dreams.
Foundational Beliefs, cont‟d
   Physical objects: Even if we fail to
    perceive physical objects accurately, the
    “primary [measurable] qualities” of such
    objects (matter, extension, shape, quantity,
    size, location, time, etc.) are really real
    (i.e., physical objects do really exist).

   Even if empirical beliefs are subject to
    doubt, mathematical propositions are
    indubitable (e.g., 3 + 2 = 5, a square has
    neither more nor less than four sides).
   How does Descartes challenge each of the
    foregoing foundational beliefs?

   How does he use the ideas of God and the
    Devil in building his case in support of
    radical skepticism?
Meditation II



Descartes’ Refutation of Radical Skepticism
Descartes‟ refutation of
      radical skepticism


“Cogito ergo sum!”

           What does this mean?
The most famous statement in
     the history of philosophy:




“I think; therefore I am.”

           Discourse on Method (1637)
“If I am deceived,

              then I must exist!”

                             I cannot doubt the truth of
                             the statement, “I exist.”
I can't think that I am not thinking
because then I am thinking; and if I
am thinking, then I must exist. To
doubt my own existence, I must
exist!
Thus,


Radical (general) skepticism is refuted.
Meditation II, cont‟d



   The Mind-Body Problem &
Descartes’ Psycho-Somatic Dualism
Three metaphysical
perspectives relevant to the
   “mind-body problem”
Metaphysical Dualism: Reality is two-
dimensional, partly material and partly non-
material (minds, ideas, souls, spirits,
consciousness, etc.).

Metaphysical Materialism: Reality is nothing
but matter-in-motion-in-space-and-in-time.
There are no non-material realities.

Metaphysical Idealism: Reality is nothing
but Mind, Idea, Soul, Spirit, Consciousness,
etc. Matter does not exist (it’s an illusion?).
Application to the “mind-body problem”
    Metaphysical Materialism: A person is nothing but a
     physical organism (body only). "Mind" (consciousness)
     a feature (function, epiphenomenon) of the body.

    Metaphysical Idealism: A person is “consciousness
     only” (mind, soul, spirit); not at all a material being.

    Metaphysical Dualism: A person is a composite of (1)
     “mind” (consciousness, intellect, soul, spirit) and (2)
     body.
Cartesian Dualism
 I know with certainty THAT “I” exist
  (Cogito ergo sum), but
 WHAT am “I”?
 Am “I” my body? No, because I can doubt
  the existence of my body, whereas I cannot
  doubt the existence of myself (the “I”).
 “I” am a thinking thing, a thing that doubts,
  understands, affirms, denies, wills, refuses,
  imagines, and has sensations.
Is Descartes right?

Can you doubt the existence
 of your body (as well as
  other physical things)?

              Why or why not?
“I can conceive of myself as
existing without a body, but
I cannot conceive of myself
     as existing without
   conscious awareness.”

             Bryan Magee, The Great
            Philosophers (Oxford 1987)
Detour

Descartes' piece of wax
 (What is this about?)

                   D' piece of wax is a physical object.
                   How is it known? Through the senses?
                   Through the power of imagination?
                   Through the intellect (judgment,
                   intuition)?
That piece of wax….

   A major dispute running through the entire history of philosophy has to do with
    the source(s) of human knowledge. There are two major schools: rationalism and
    empiricism. The empiricists hold that knowledge is derived from sense perception
    and experience. The rationalists (such as Descartes) hold that knowledge is derived
    from clear logical thinking, from the intellect (i.e., from "reason").


   In the "wax" section, which is a kind of detour from his main argument, Descartes
    is showing his support of rationalism. He argues that we know - through the
    intellect - that the wax is and remains what it is as it passes through time and
    change. Sense perception does not show the "substance" of the wax but only its
    various appearances. If we relied on sense experience rather than on "reason,"
    then we would "know" that the wax is all of the following: cold and hard, warm
    and soft, hot and liquid. However, "reason" (not the senses) tells us that the
    substance (reality) of the wax is something more fundamental than its sensual
    appearances.

   Process Philosophy notes that identity can remain through change
Back to the mind-body problem….


                      So…
                in Descartes‟ view,

    my body exists (if it exists at all)
   outside of my consciousness and is
 therefore part of the “external world.”

                                  Thus,
Descartes‟ mind-body dualism
        leads to . . . .
Meditation III,
             which deals with
(1) skepticism concerning the
  existence & nature of the
       “external world”
               &
   (2) the existence of God
         Brain in a vat:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urs
“I must, as soon as possible, try to
 determine (1) whether or not God
 exists and (2) whether or not He
  can be a deceiver. Until I know
  these two things, I will never be
     certain of anything else”

          Why does Descartes say this?
And why does Descartes think it
necessary to prove the existence of God?

   It's because he's looking for a guarantee that the "external world"
    (the world outside of his mind) is really real and not just an
    illusion. How does a proof of the existence of God help him with
    that problem?
   The point is that God (who is no deceiver) guarantees that the
    world I perceive through my senses is really there. God
    authenticates my sensory experiences, thus making sensation
    generally reliable, not in and of itself, but because God (being
    perfectly good) will not allow me to be systematically deluded and
    deceived.
   By the way, if Descartes trusted his senses, this "external world"
    issue would not be a problem for him. But Descartes, a
    "Rationalist" rather than an "Empiricist," does not trust sense
    experience. He needs something more than sense experience to
    convince him that the "external world" is real. He needs God.
Descartes’ standard of
          certainty
 What   does it take for a belief to be
  certainly (indubitably) true?
 The belief must be “clear and
  distinct.” (But what does this mean?)
 Descartes’ general rule: “Everything
  that I can clearly and distinctly grasp
  is true.”
Are the following beliefs
        “clear & distinct”
          (indubitable)?
 That there are things outside myself (such
  as physical objects).
 That these external things cause my ideas of
  those things in my mind.
 That my ideas of external things perfectly
  “resemble” the things themselves.
 That 3 + 2 = 5 ?
Reasons for believing (1) that there
  are things outside myself, (2) that
these external things cause my ideas
  of those things in my mind, and (3)
    that my ideas of external things
“resemble” (accurately represent) the
          things themselves*:


                 *The epistemology represented by
                 (1), (2), & (3) is known as
                 “Representationalism.”
I have a strong natural inclination to
      believe the preceding three
      propositions.

      My ideas of external things arise in
      my mind independently of my will.

      It seems obvious that external
      objects impress their own likenesses
      upon my senses.
(Do these reasons “clearly & distinctly” prove that
Representational Realism is true?)
Ideas & their causes
When I think of an entity, I can
   distinguish between . . . .
 Substance (i.e., the entity itself, e.g., an
  automobile tire),
 Modes (i.e., the ways in which the entity exists,
  e.g., the tire may be flat ), and
 Accidents (i.e., the properties, qualities, or
  attributes of the entity, e.g., the color of the tire
  [blackness?] ).
                    And isn’t it obvious that substance
                    is more real than mode or accident?
Ideas of things (substances,
           modes, accidents)
must be caused to be in the mind, and

      the cause of any effect must be sufficient to
      produce its effect, i.e.,

               there must be at least as much reality in a
               cause as is represented in its effect.
Descartes thinks of ideas as
                                        But is this last point true?
   subjective representations of        Suppose I perceive an
    the realities that cause them        automobile with a dented
                                         fender &, from my
    to be in the mind.                   perception, an idea of the
   He also believes that ideas          car arises in my mind.
    cannot represent more reality        Why can’t I think of the
                                         car as NOT having a
    (anything greater or more            dented fender?
    perfect) than is in the things      How might Descartes
    the ideas represent.                 respond to this criticism?
If one of my ideas
  has something in it that is not within myself,
   then
  I could not be the cause of that idea;
   whereas
  if I could be the cause of all of my ideas,
   then
  I will have no foolproof reason to believe
   that anything exists other than myself.
Ideas in my mind:
 of myself (could be caused by myself)
 of God
 of lifeless physical objects
 of angels
                          Could be composed from my
 of animals              ideas of myself, physical
                          objects, and God (how?)
 of other people


                     What about physical objects?
The qualities of physical objects:

   Primary qualities: size, length,
   breadth, depth, shape, position, motion,
   substance, duration, number, etc.
   Secondaryqualities: light, color,
   sound, odor, taste, heat, cold, etc.
Since my ideas of the secondary
  qualities of physical objects

 are not “clear and distinct,”
 and since such qualities are almost
  indistinguishable from nothing (i.e, they
  seem to represent very little reality),
 I myself [a substance] could be the author
  of such ideas.
I could also be the cause of
    my ideas of primary qualities.
 I am a substance.
 I have duration in that I exist now and have
  existed for some time.
 I can count my several thoughts and thus the
  idea of number may be grounded in my thought
  process.
 But what about my ideas of extension, shape,
  position, and motion?
Although extension, shape,
position, or motion do not exist
   in me (since “I” am not a
        physical being),

   these are only modes of
existence, and, as a substance,
            “I” have more reality than these
            modes and “I” am therefore
            sufficient to cause my ideas of them.
Thus,

  I could be the cause of my
ideas of both the primary and
      secondary qualities

           of physical objects.
                       However,
I do not have what it takes

to produce the idea of God
  (an infinite substance)

                 from within myself
                 (a finite substance).
Descartes‟ first argument


for the existence of God . . . .
“By „God,‟ I mean

   an infinite and independent
SUBSTANCE, all-knowing and all-
  powerful, who created me and
      everything else . . . . ”

          This idea represents more reality than there is
          in myself (since I am finite, limited in
          knowledge & power, etc.). Thus, the idea of
          God must be caused to be in my mind by
          something other than myself. And . . . .
since there must be at least as
        much reality in a cause as
         there is in its effect(s),

 it follows “necessarily” that my idea of God
must be caused by God Himself; and if God is
        the cause of my idea of God, then




                    God must exist!
Descartes‟ main point here is
   that I could not be the          How could I, merely from
    cause of the idea of God          within myself, form the
    that I find in my mind            idea of a being more
   since God is a being more         perfect than myself?
    perfect than myself.             In that case, my idea
   Anselm’s Ontological              would represent more
    Argument                          reality than there is in its
                                      cause.




                                Only God is a sufficient cause
                                of the idea of God in my mind.
"Step 3" Presentation of D's 1st Argument
         for the Existence of God
                     (not sure about this)


 1. All events are caused.
 2. A cause must be sufficient to produce its effects.
 3. My idea of a perfect being is a mental event.
 4. Only a perfect being is a sufficient cause of my idea of a
    Perfect being.
 5. If a perfect being is the cause of my idea of a perfect being,
    then a perfect being exists.
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 6. A perfect being (God) exists.
Descartes‟ second argument

for the existence of God . . . .
I exist as a thinking thing
  with the idea of God (an infinitely
      perfect being) in my mind,
     but my existence is not necessary -- it is
contingent (i.e., my non-existence is conceivable,
       logically possible) -- which means


                     that I must be caused to exist (at
                     every moment of my existence) by
                     something other than myself.
If the cause of my existence
   is itself a contingent being or a set of contingent
    beings (e.g., my parents or something else less
    perfect than God), then
   it must also be caused to exist by something other
    than itself. But . . . .
   this cause-and-effect process cannot go on to infinity
    since in that case
   I could never begin to exist (the infinite regress
    problem again).
   So . . . .
there must be a First Cause

whose existence is necessary (rather
        than contingent).




                        Furthermore . . . ,
this necessarily existing First Cause,

   which is the ultimate cause of my existence,
   must have the idea of God in it, and
   since it is a First Cause, its idea of God
    must be caused by itself and nothing else,
    which means
   that this First Cause must be God (since
    only God can be the original cause of the
    idea of God in any mind). – (remember
    Aquinas?)
"Step 3" Presentation of D's 2d Argument
          for the Existence of God
                               (not sure about this)

1. All contingent beings must be caused to exist.
2. I exist as a contingent and thinking being, with the idea of a perfect being in my
   mind [and as contingent, I must be caused to exist--premise 1].
3. If something causes existence only if it is itself caused to exist, then its causal
   series is infinitely long.
4. An infinite (or infinitely regressing) series of causes leading up to my present
   existence is logically impossible, since, in that case, I could never begin to exist
   [i.e., I would have no existence at all].
5. A cause must be sufficient to produce its effects.
6. To be a sufficient cause of my existence, the "first cause" of my existence must be
   a necessarily existing [premises 4 and 5] and thinking being possessing the idea
   of perfection [premise 2].
7. The "first cause" of my existence is the cause of its own idea of perfection and is
   therefore, itself, a perfect being [otherwise it would not be "first"].
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. A perfect being (God) exists.
Why does Descartes reject
       the claim that
 his existence as a contingent being with the
idea of God in its mind might be the effect of
  several natural causes, each representing a
         different kind of perfection?
Conclusion of the 3rd Meditation

 "From the simple fact that I exist and that I have in my
 mind the idea of a supremely perfect being, that is,
 God, it necessarily follows that God exists . . . . The
 whole argument rests on my realization that it would
 be impossible for me to exist as I do -- namely, with
 the idea of God in my mind -- if God didn’t exist. It
 also follows that [since God is perfect] God cannot be
 a deceiver [because fraud and deception are caused by
 defects] . . . ."
Summery
   Archimedean point – find a foundational principle
   Cogito Ergo Sum – I think therefore I am
   Descartes in 90 min:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTYkMOc3Yj
    c
   Williams -
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44h9QuWcJYk
The idea that God cannot
                     be a deceiver
    leads to



Slides on Meditation IV under construction – but see next slide for a brief summary….
The Basic Thrust of Meditation IV:

   If God is no deceiver, how is human error with respect to truth and falsity possible,
    and how is that error to be explained?
   Human nature is equipped with an intellect (faculty of knowing) and a free will
    (faculty of choosing), which interact in the pursuit of truth. The intellect is capable
    of forming beliefs that can't be doubted and therefore are certainly true. However,
    the intellect can also consider claims that are subject to doubt and that therefore
    may be false. The human will is free to affirm or deny propositions proposed to it
    by the intellect. Error results when the will (1) denies the truth, or (2) affirms
    claims that are false, or (3) asserts knowledge where there is doubt.
   Error is avoidable where a person limits her his affirmations and denials to "those
    matters that are clearly and distinctly [indubitably] shown to . . . [the will] by the
    intellect . . . . " and remains (more or less) neutral with respect to all claims that
    are subject to doubt.
   Why does God permit human error? If human nature were created both free and
    incapable of error, it would be more perfect than it now is; but it may be that the
    apparent imperfection of human nature in this respect is necessary to "a greater
    perfection of the universe as a whole."
God & the removal of doubt as to

     the existence of the external world
The content of Meditation V
   Mathematical thinking & its (physical &
    non-physical) objects: clarity &
    distinctness again -- what is clear & distinct
    must be true

   D’s “ontological” argument for the
    existence of God

   God & certainty
Descartes’ third argument

for the existence of God


          (the ontological argument again)
1. If the nonexistence of God (an infinitely perfect
   being) were possible, then existence would not be
   part of God’s essence (that is, existence would not
   be a property of the divine nature).
2. If existence were not part of God’s essence (that is,
   a property of the divine nature), then God would be
   a contingent (rather than necessary) being.
3. The idea of God as a contingent being (that is, the
   idea of an infinitely perfect being with contingent
   rather than necessary existence) is self-contradictory.
4. It is impossible to think of God as not existing.

5. The nonexistence of God is impossible.
Certainty about God

is the basis of certainty about
        everything else.
Meditation VI
  Removal of doubt as to the
existence of the external world

 Since God exists
 & is no deceiver,
 it follows necessarily
 that the external world can be
  known to exist.
To be continued….

  (There's a lot more in the 6th Meditation than is
  covered in this presentation…so far.)

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Descartes lecture 10

  • 2. Descartes (1596-1650 AD)  General Biography: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kIatZjJ s5I  3 Minute philosophy: Descartes http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHihkR wisbE
  • 3. Revised, 1/7/07 René Descartes (1596-1650 AD) Meditations on First Philosophy (1641)
  • 4. Background Descartes‟ Problem  The problem of skepticism (D concentrates on 2 types of skepticism) – General skepticism: There are NO indubitable (not doubtable) beliefs or propositions. – Skepticism concerning the existence & nature of the “external world”: The existence and nature of the “external world” cannot be known. – The Matrix: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEr8hnvzeHU
  • 5. The overall structure of D‟s Meditations (next slide)
  • 6. General Cogito (existence of the “I”) (Med. I) (Med. II) Mind-Body Dualism Skepticism (That piece of wax) God (no deceiver) External 1. My idea of God (III) World 2. My contingent (Meds. III-VI) existence (III) 3. The ontological argument (again) (V)
  • 8. Descartes‟ “Foundationalism” Epistemological Foundations & Superstructure Superstructural Beliefs (also false?) False False False Foundational Foundational Foundational Belief Belief Belief If the underlying foundations of our beliefs are false, then it is possible that all of our beliefs are false too!
  • 9. D‟s program of radical doubt  Treat any belief that is to the slightest extent uncertain & subject to doubt just as though it is obviously false.  Accept only those beliefs that are completely certain and indubitable.  Work on the foundations of my beliefs. What are the underlying foundations of my beliefs?
  • 10. Foundational Beliefs (common assumptions we make)  Naïve Empiricism: True beliefs are acquired through sense experience.  My beliefs are not products of insanity.  My beliefs are not products of my dreams.
  • 11. Foundational Beliefs, cont‟d  Physical objects: Even if we fail to perceive physical objects accurately, the “primary [measurable] qualities” of such objects (matter, extension, shape, quantity, size, location, time, etc.) are really real (i.e., physical objects do really exist).  Even if empirical beliefs are subject to doubt, mathematical propositions are indubitable (e.g., 3 + 2 = 5, a square has neither more nor less than four sides).
  • 12. How does Descartes challenge each of the foregoing foundational beliefs?  How does he use the ideas of God and the Devil in building his case in support of radical skepticism?
  • 13. Meditation II Descartes’ Refutation of Radical Skepticism
  • 14. Descartes‟ refutation of radical skepticism “Cogito ergo sum!” What does this mean?
  • 15. The most famous statement in the history of philosophy: “I think; therefore I am.” Discourse on Method (1637)
  • 16. “If I am deceived, then I must exist!” I cannot doubt the truth of the statement, “I exist.” I can't think that I am not thinking because then I am thinking; and if I am thinking, then I must exist. To doubt my own existence, I must exist!
  • 18. Meditation II, cont‟d The Mind-Body Problem & Descartes’ Psycho-Somatic Dualism
  • 19. Three metaphysical perspectives relevant to the “mind-body problem”
  • 20. Metaphysical Dualism: Reality is two- dimensional, partly material and partly non- material (minds, ideas, souls, spirits, consciousness, etc.). Metaphysical Materialism: Reality is nothing but matter-in-motion-in-space-and-in-time. There are no non-material realities. Metaphysical Idealism: Reality is nothing but Mind, Idea, Soul, Spirit, Consciousness, etc. Matter does not exist (it’s an illusion?).
  • 21. Application to the “mind-body problem”  Metaphysical Materialism: A person is nothing but a physical organism (body only). "Mind" (consciousness) a feature (function, epiphenomenon) of the body.  Metaphysical Idealism: A person is “consciousness only” (mind, soul, spirit); not at all a material being.  Metaphysical Dualism: A person is a composite of (1) “mind” (consciousness, intellect, soul, spirit) and (2) body.
  • 22. Cartesian Dualism  I know with certainty THAT “I” exist (Cogito ergo sum), but  WHAT am “I”?  Am “I” my body? No, because I can doubt the existence of my body, whereas I cannot doubt the existence of myself (the “I”).  “I” am a thinking thing, a thing that doubts, understands, affirms, denies, wills, refuses, imagines, and has sensations.
  • 23. Is Descartes right? Can you doubt the existence of your body (as well as other physical things)? Why or why not?
  • 24. “I can conceive of myself as existing without a body, but I cannot conceive of myself as existing without conscious awareness.” Bryan Magee, The Great Philosophers (Oxford 1987)
  • 25. Detour Descartes' piece of wax (What is this about?) D' piece of wax is a physical object. How is it known? Through the senses? Through the power of imagination? Through the intellect (judgment, intuition)?
  • 26. That piece of wax….  A major dispute running through the entire history of philosophy has to do with the source(s) of human knowledge. There are two major schools: rationalism and empiricism. The empiricists hold that knowledge is derived from sense perception and experience. The rationalists (such as Descartes) hold that knowledge is derived from clear logical thinking, from the intellect (i.e., from "reason").  In the "wax" section, which is a kind of detour from his main argument, Descartes is showing his support of rationalism. He argues that we know - through the intellect - that the wax is and remains what it is as it passes through time and change. Sense perception does not show the "substance" of the wax but only its various appearances. If we relied on sense experience rather than on "reason," then we would "know" that the wax is all of the following: cold and hard, warm and soft, hot and liquid. However, "reason" (not the senses) tells us that the substance (reality) of the wax is something more fundamental than its sensual appearances.  Process Philosophy notes that identity can remain through change
  • 27. Back to the mind-body problem…. So… in Descartes‟ view, my body exists (if it exists at all) outside of my consciousness and is therefore part of the “external world.” Thus,
  • 28. Descartes‟ mind-body dualism leads to . . . .
  • 29. Meditation III, which deals with (1) skepticism concerning the existence & nature of the “external world” & (2) the existence of God Brain in a vat: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urs
  • 30. “I must, as soon as possible, try to determine (1) whether or not God exists and (2) whether or not He can be a deceiver. Until I know these two things, I will never be certain of anything else” Why does Descartes say this?
  • 31. And why does Descartes think it necessary to prove the existence of God?  It's because he's looking for a guarantee that the "external world" (the world outside of his mind) is really real and not just an illusion. How does a proof of the existence of God help him with that problem?  The point is that God (who is no deceiver) guarantees that the world I perceive through my senses is really there. God authenticates my sensory experiences, thus making sensation generally reliable, not in and of itself, but because God (being perfectly good) will not allow me to be systematically deluded and deceived.  By the way, if Descartes trusted his senses, this "external world" issue would not be a problem for him. But Descartes, a "Rationalist" rather than an "Empiricist," does not trust sense experience. He needs something more than sense experience to convince him that the "external world" is real. He needs God.
  • 32. Descartes’ standard of certainty  What does it take for a belief to be certainly (indubitably) true?  The belief must be “clear and distinct.” (But what does this mean?)  Descartes’ general rule: “Everything that I can clearly and distinctly grasp is true.”
  • 33. Are the following beliefs “clear & distinct” (indubitable)?  That there are things outside myself (such as physical objects).  That these external things cause my ideas of those things in my mind.  That my ideas of external things perfectly “resemble” the things themselves.  That 3 + 2 = 5 ?
  • 34. Reasons for believing (1) that there are things outside myself, (2) that these external things cause my ideas of those things in my mind, and (3) that my ideas of external things “resemble” (accurately represent) the things themselves*: *The epistemology represented by (1), (2), & (3) is known as “Representationalism.”
  • 35. I have a strong natural inclination to believe the preceding three propositions. My ideas of external things arise in my mind independently of my will. It seems obvious that external objects impress their own likenesses upon my senses. (Do these reasons “clearly & distinctly” prove that Representational Realism is true?)
  • 36. Ideas & their causes
  • 37. When I think of an entity, I can distinguish between . . . .  Substance (i.e., the entity itself, e.g., an automobile tire),  Modes (i.e., the ways in which the entity exists, e.g., the tire may be flat ), and  Accidents (i.e., the properties, qualities, or attributes of the entity, e.g., the color of the tire [blackness?] ). And isn’t it obvious that substance is more real than mode or accident?
  • 38. Ideas of things (substances, modes, accidents) must be caused to be in the mind, and the cause of any effect must be sufficient to produce its effect, i.e., there must be at least as much reality in a cause as is represented in its effect.
  • 39. Descartes thinks of ideas as  But is this last point true?  subjective representations of Suppose I perceive an the realities that cause them automobile with a dented fender &, from my to be in the mind. perception, an idea of the  He also believes that ideas car arises in my mind. cannot represent more reality Why can’t I think of the car as NOT having a (anything greater or more dented fender? perfect) than is in the things  How might Descartes the ideas represent. respond to this criticism?
  • 40. If one of my ideas  has something in it that is not within myself, then  I could not be the cause of that idea; whereas  if I could be the cause of all of my ideas, then  I will have no foolproof reason to believe that anything exists other than myself.
  • 41. Ideas in my mind:  of myself (could be caused by myself)  of God  of lifeless physical objects  of angels Could be composed from my  of animals ideas of myself, physical objects, and God (how?)  of other people What about physical objects?
  • 42. The qualities of physical objects:  Primary qualities: size, length, breadth, depth, shape, position, motion, substance, duration, number, etc.  Secondaryqualities: light, color, sound, odor, taste, heat, cold, etc.
  • 43. Since my ideas of the secondary qualities of physical objects  are not “clear and distinct,”  and since such qualities are almost indistinguishable from nothing (i.e, they seem to represent very little reality),  I myself [a substance] could be the author of such ideas.
  • 44. I could also be the cause of my ideas of primary qualities.  I am a substance.  I have duration in that I exist now and have existed for some time.  I can count my several thoughts and thus the idea of number may be grounded in my thought process.  But what about my ideas of extension, shape, position, and motion?
  • 45. Although extension, shape, position, or motion do not exist in me (since “I” am not a physical being), these are only modes of existence, and, as a substance, “I” have more reality than these modes and “I” am therefore sufficient to cause my ideas of them.
  • 46. Thus, I could be the cause of my ideas of both the primary and secondary qualities of physical objects. However,
  • 47. I do not have what it takes to produce the idea of God (an infinite substance) from within myself (a finite substance).
  • 48. Descartes‟ first argument for the existence of God . . . .
  • 49. “By „God,‟ I mean an infinite and independent SUBSTANCE, all-knowing and all- powerful, who created me and everything else . . . . ” This idea represents more reality than there is in myself (since I am finite, limited in knowledge & power, etc.). Thus, the idea of God must be caused to be in my mind by something other than myself. And . . . .
  • 50. since there must be at least as much reality in a cause as there is in its effect(s), it follows “necessarily” that my idea of God must be caused by God Himself; and if God is the cause of my idea of God, then God must exist!
  • 51. Descartes‟ main point here is  that I could not be the  How could I, merely from cause of the idea of God within myself, form the that I find in my mind idea of a being more  since God is a being more perfect than myself? perfect than myself.  In that case, my idea  Anselm’s Ontological would represent more Argument reality than there is in its cause. Only God is a sufficient cause of the idea of God in my mind.
  • 52. "Step 3" Presentation of D's 1st Argument for the Existence of God (not sure about this) 1. All events are caused. 2. A cause must be sufficient to produce its effects. 3. My idea of a perfect being is a mental event. 4. Only a perfect being is a sufficient cause of my idea of a Perfect being. 5. If a perfect being is the cause of my idea of a perfect being, then a perfect being exists. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6. A perfect being (God) exists.
  • 53. Descartes‟ second argument for the existence of God . . . .
  • 54. I exist as a thinking thing with the idea of God (an infinitely perfect being) in my mind, but my existence is not necessary -- it is contingent (i.e., my non-existence is conceivable, logically possible) -- which means that I must be caused to exist (at every moment of my existence) by something other than myself.
  • 55. If the cause of my existence  is itself a contingent being or a set of contingent beings (e.g., my parents or something else less perfect than God), then  it must also be caused to exist by something other than itself. But . . . .  this cause-and-effect process cannot go on to infinity since in that case  I could never begin to exist (the infinite regress problem again).  So . . . .
  • 56. there must be a First Cause whose existence is necessary (rather than contingent). Furthermore . . . ,
  • 57. this necessarily existing First Cause,  which is the ultimate cause of my existence,  must have the idea of God in it, and  since it is a First Cause, its idea of God must be caused by itself and nothing else, which means  that this First Cause must be God (since only God can be the original cause of the idea of God in any mind). – (remember Aquinas?)
  • 58. "Step 3" Presentation of D's 2d Argument for the Existence of God (not sure about this) 1. All contingent beings must be caused to exist. 2. I exist as a contingent and thinking being, with the idea of a perfect being in my mind [and as contingent, I must be caused to exist--premise 1]. 3. If something causes existence only if it is itself caused to exist, then its causal series is infinitely long. 4. An infinite (or infinitely regressing) series of causes leading up to my present existence is logically impossible, since, in that case, I could never begin to exist [i.e., I would have no existence at all]. 5. A cause must be sufficient to produce its effects. 6. To be a sufficient cause of my existence, the "first cause" of my existence must be a necessarily existing [premises 4 and 5] and thinking being possessing the idea of perfection [premise 2]. 7. The "first cause" of my existence is the cause of its own idea of perfection and is therefore, itself, a perfect being [otherwise it would not be "first"]. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8. A perfect being (God) exists.
  • 59. Why does Descartes reject the claim that his existence as a contingent being with the idea of God in its mind might be the effect of several natural causes, each representing a different kind of perfection?
  • 60. Conclusion of the 3rd Meditation "From the simple fact that I exist and that I have in my mind the idea of a supremely perfect being, that is, God, it necessarily follows that God exists . . . . The whole argument rests on my realization that it would be impossible for me to exist as I do -- namely, with the idea of God in my mind -- if God didn’t exist. It also follows that [since God is perfect] God cannot be a deceiver [because fraud and deception are caused by defects] . . . ."
  • 61. Summery  Archimedean point – find a foundational principle  Cogito Ergo Sum – I think therefore I am  Descartes in 90 min: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTYkMOc3Yj c  Williams - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44h9QuWcJYk
  • 62. The idea that God cannot be a deceiver leads to Slides on Meditation IV under construction – but see next slide for a brief summary….
  • 63. The Basic Thrust of Meditation IV:  If God is no deceiver, how is human error with respect to truth and falsity possible, and how is that error to be explained?  Human nature is equipped with an intellect (faculty of knowing) and a free will (faculty of choosing), which interact in the pursuit of truth. The intellect is capable of forming beliefs that can't be doubted and therefore are certainly true. However, the intellect can also consider claims that are subject to doubt and that therefore may be false. The human will is free to affirm or deny propositions proposed to it by the intellect. Error results when the will (1) denies the truth, or (2) affirms claims that are false, or (3) asserts knowledge where there is doubt.  Error is avoidable where a person limits her his affirmations and denials to "those matters that are clearly and distinctly [indubitably] shown to . . . [the will] by the intellect . . . . " and remains (more or less) neutral with respect to all claims that are subject to doubt.  Why does God permit human error? If human nature were created both free and incapable of error, it would be more perfect than it now is; but it may be that the apparent imperfection of human nature in this respect is necessary to "a greater perfection of the universe as a whole."
  • 64. God & the removal of doubt as to the existence of the external world
  • 65. The content of Meditation V  Mathematical thinking & its (physical & non-physical) objects: clarity & distinctness again -- what is clear & distinct must be true  D’s “ontological” argument for the existence of God  God & certainty
  • 66. Descartes’ third argument for the existence of God (the ontological argument again)
  • 67. 1. If the nonexistence of God (an infinitely perfect being) were possible, then existence would not be part of God’s essence (that is, existence would not be a property of the divine nature). 2. If existence were not part of God’s essence (that is, a property of the divine nature), then God would be a contingent (rather than necessary) being. 3. The idea of God as a contingent being (that is, the idea of an infinitely perfect being with contingent rather than necessary existence) is self-contradictory. 4. It is impossible to think of God as not existing. 5. The nonexistence of God is impossible.
  • 68. Certainty about God is the basis of certainty about everything else.
  • 69. Meditation VI Removal of doubt as to the existence of the external world  Since God exists  & is no deceiver,  it follows necessarily  that the external world can be known to exist.
  • 70. To be continued…. (There's a lot more in the 6th Meditation than is covered in this presentation…so far.)