 Kranky
Kranky         
          A Seagull
A Seagull         
         The more I read about Cogito Ergo Sum, the less I understand existence.
Descartes presupposed I; he took existence as a starting point to prove existence. In doing so, he failed.
All I want to know is that I exist. I want to know that my thoughts are my own. But I have found nothing that proves certainty.
Anyone help? — Kranky
 Possibility
Possibility         
          BrianW
BrianW         
          David Mo
David Mo         
         Descartes did not presuppose the existence of "I". He experienced his thought and that gave rise to the inescapable, irrefutable truth, that he exists; — god must be atheist
 Sir Philo Sophia
Sir Philo Sophia         
          noAxioms
noAxioms         
         Out of curiosity, why?All I want to know is that I exist. — Kranky
 Arne
Arne         
         Descartes presupposed I; he took existence as a starting point to prove existence. In doing so, he failed. — Kranky
 Arne
Arne         
         In reality, Descartes did not think that the cogito was a truth of experience in the usual sense of the term. It was a rational intuition that I think and that if I think it is rationally impossible for me not to exist. The negation of the cogito ergo sum would be a blatant contradiction. — David Mo
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