"Ergo, if I = something that's thinking, you are me, I'm you, you're Descartes, Descartes is me, so and so forth until I = everyone."
I don't agree with that. "I" /= "something that's thinking". "Something that's thinking" is a necessary condition for the self to exist, but it's not a sufficient condition. I like the definition of the self as "this particular conscious awareness". — RogueAI
:roll:Doubting, therefore doubting happens.
“...The "I think" is, as has been already stated, an empirical proposition, and contains the proposition, "I exist." But I cannot say, "Everything, which thinks, exists"; for in this case the property of thought would constitute all beings necessarily. Hence my existence cannot be considered as an inference from the proposition, "I think," as Descartes maintained—because....” — Mww
What do you think “infer his own existence” to mean? — Mww
Is the complaint that he hasn't executed a proper ontological proof? — frank
And he failed at that, because, as aforementioned, he didn’t consider, or at least didn’t use, the categories, as did Kant, — Mww
As an aside, there is also a standing Kantian metaphysical argument, unknown and/or not recognized as valid by Descartes, that existence cannot be a predicate in a logical proposition. So, if “I think” is true, “I am” is given immediately because of it. I mean....how could it be that “I think” but “I am not”. — Mww
Subtleties indeed. As in Tonini, I’ll wager. — Mww
From my childhood they fed me books, and because people convinced me that these could give me clear and certain knowledge of everything useful in life, I was extremely eager to learn them. But no sooner had I completed the whole course of study that normally takes one straight into the
ranks of the ‘learned’ than I completely changed my mind about what this education could do for me·. For I found myself tangled in so many doubts and errors that I came to think that my attempts to become educated had done me no good except to give me a steadily widening view of my
ignorance!
I don’t know whether I should tell you of the first meditations that I had there, for they are perhaps too metaphysical [here= ‘abstract’] and uncommon for everyone’s taste. But I have to report on them if you are to judge whether the foundations I have chosen are firm enough. I had long been aware that in practical life one sometimes has to act on opinions that one knows to be quite uncertain just as if they were unquestionably •true (I remarked on this above). But now that I wanted to devote myself solely to the search for truth, I thought I needed to do the exact opposite—to reject as if it were absolutely •false everything regarding which I could imagine the least doubt, so as to see whether this left me with anything entirely indubitable to believe.
Emphasis added.I decided to pretend that everything that had ever entered my mind was no more true than the illusions of my dreams ...
Emphasis added.But no sooner had I embarked on this project than I noticed that while I was trying in this way to think everything to be false it had to be the case that I, who was thinking this, was something.
Could you explain how his outcome would have been different if he had? — frank
Well, then, what am I? A thing that thinks. What is that? A thing that doubts, understands, affirms, denies, wants, refuses, and also imagines and senses. (Second Meditation)
Is it the same to define a term, as it is to declare how it is meant to be understood? — Mww
But these are utterly simple notions, which don’t on their own give us knowledge of anything that exists ...
How a term is meant to be understood is by definition a definition. — Fooloso4
we do not gain knowledge by analysis of definitions. — Fooloso4
Can the mind/body distinction be made if sensory awareness is a matter of thought? — Fooloso4
I suppose there’s all kinds of ways to distinguish one from another, right? — Mww
Recognition of the validity of thinking outside the Bible. — Mww
Descartes also did work in natural philosophy, optics, mechanics, physics, medicine, and so on. By regarding the physical world as mechanistic he jettisons final causes as well as the idea that mind or reason or God guides the course of things. — Fooloso4
final cause has yet to be jettisoned from science because it's embedded in biology. — frank
at once consistent with it and contrary to it. — Fooloso4
But if he rejects that mind, body and god all are not responsible for guidance in the course of things, does he then claim Nature itself, is? I mean....what’s left? That, or the course of things isn’t guided at all, I guess — Mww
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