If we take philosophy literally and at face value, we are not putting it in contrast to the rest of the tradition, nor questioning why he has chosen this method, why he needs certainty. — Antony Nickles
... establish anything in the sciences that was stable and likely to last ...
The fact that Descartes “withdraws from the practical concerns of daily life” is not only the cause of the abstraction, — Antony Nickles
to be apart from our human life, its uncertainty. — Antony Nickles
So I do not take anything as “rhetorical” but take it seriously enough to attribute reasons for everything, implications, assumptions, motivations, blind spots, frameworks, analogies, etc. — Antony Nickles
The crux of what I see is that Descartes is demonizing the inherent fallibility of our human condition. — Antony Nickles
The senses are the spark. But it's a bit obscure to me to argue that senses think, they (seem to me) to just act in accordance to relevant stimuli. — Manuel
That part is more like Kant arguing against superstition than Hume musing about causes between billiard games. — Paine
You seem to be arguing that we should not take what he says literally, but you go on to object to the idea that there is a rhetorical aspect. — Fooloso4
Why does he need certainty? Because, as I also said, he is looking to established a foundation. — Fooloso4
we are to understand him, we should not begin by rejecting what he sets out to do. — Fooloso4
I meant we should not just take him to be making explicit everything we can learn. — Antony Nickles
He is looking for a foundation in order to have the certainty he needs to conquer doubt. — Antony Nickles
You’re assuming he’s a reliable narrator. — Antony Nickles
He took his motto from Ovid:
He who lived well hid himself well. (Bene qui latuit bene vixit) — Fooloso4
Descartes dedication to the faculty of theology is both revealing and concealing. He tells them that once they understand the principle behind his undertaking they will protect it. This raises the question of what that principle is. — Fooloso4
What he’s telling you he’s doing is not the whole picture. — Antony Nickles
I’m analyzing how he gets lost along the way because of what he wants from it. — Antony Nickles
Is anything found that does not come, ultimately, from the senses? — Janus
He is looking for a foundation in order to have the certainty he needs to conquer doubt. — Antony Nickles
I don't think so. — Fooloso4
Descartes is a careful writer. He is a central figure in Western philosophy. He did not gain that reputation by getting lost. If someone is lost it is not him. — Fooloso4
The issue I am highlighting is that it's not clear senses alone give us any knowledge, without an intellectual component… the problem is in the way we judge what the senses "say"… provide "data", which is only such because of the intellect, otherwise, senses seem to lack mind.
It is in this specific context that senses are "sparks", as we will see when we get to Descartes observation about what literally hits the eye, as opposed to what we immediately interpret. — Manuel
Well you seem to think you understand what I’m trying to say and just flatly disagree. — Antony Nickles
He is looking for a foundation in order to have the certainty he needs to conquer doubt. — Antony Nickles
this is uncalled for in this kind of forum. If you want to believe Descartes or Plato or Kant never made a mistake, feel free, but there is no cause to mock me. — Antony Nickles
The issue I am highlighting is that it's not clear senses alone give us any knowledge, without an intellectual component. — Manuel
Descartes observation about what literally hits the eye — Manuel
Whatever I have accepted until now as most true has come to me through my senses.
(First Meditation)Yet although the senses sometimes deceive us about objects that are very small or distant, that doesn’t apply to my belief that I am here, sitting by the fire, wearing a winter dressing-gown, holding this piece of paper in my hands, and so on. It seems to be quite impossible to doubt beliefs like these, which come from the senses.
... the sky, the air, the earth, colours, shapes, sounds ... no hands or eyes, or flesh, or blood or senses ...
His mechanistic view of optics allows that animals without mind can see, otherwise they would not be able to move around in the world. — Fooloso4
he lists several things that come through the senses:
Yet although the senses sometimes deceive us about objects that are very small or distant, that doesn’t apply to my belief that I am here, sitting by the fire, wearing a winter dressing-gown, holding this piece of paper in my hands, and so on. It seems to be quite impossible to doubt beliefs like these, which come from the senses.
... the sky, the air, the earth, colours, shapes, sounds ... no hands or eyes, or flesh, or blood or senses ... — Fooloso4
In other words, in the Theatetus Socrates first postulated that our senses gave us the criteria (measure) for knowledge, but abandoned that picture simply because our senses can be wrong, or not generalizable from person to person. Of course it remains to be seen how and thus why we need to posit an “intellect” rather than training our expression of cold to language. — Antony Nickles
If I would predict his next step, it would be that the separation of sensation from that-which-could-be-deceived (“intellect”) would only be to maintain the integrity of our senses while controlling the framework by which we are deceived, to structure our failing. — Antony Nickles
I was referring to human beings in that example. — Manuel
the intellect too can deceive us — Manuel
Are the senses alone sufficient? Given the connection between mind and body, which he will discuss, perhaps the problem arises only in abstraction, when mind and body are artificially separated and not treated as a union. — Fooloso4
As we see with Zeno and the denial of motion. Does this fall under logical formulations? — Fooloso4
What do we do with edge cases, such as plants or oysters? Do we assume some minimal intellect here or is it all sense? — Manuel
That is, we cannot tell the difference in behavior between and intellectual response to sensation, and a reflexive one...
Descartes assumed, more often than not (again, some inconsistency here) that animals were kind of like machines. But that claim would no longer be supported by most these days... — Manuel
we imagine we can’t be wrong about them. We think: If I am in pain, I must know it, and know it without a doubt. But we can repress it, and even to where it doesn’t register. — Antony Nickles
We cannot be wrong about consciously feeling pain. — Janus
I think we can see that some animals have preferences, and so display intentional behavior. This might not be obvious in simple 'one-off' acts, but extended observation and testing I think would show the difference.
The idea that animals are machines and hence, for example, feel no pain seems absurd to me, and is abhorrent. — Janus
I don't think this [ that Descartes is demonizing the inherent fallibility of our human condition ] captures the significance of Descartes using the motif of an evil demon during his experiment upon himself. In a time when people were executed for witchcraft, demanding that a 'good' god would not deliberately deceive us separates the realm of the created from the problem of sin. — Paine
I take you as saying that Descartes is creating the role of the deceiver so that it won’t be thought he is speaking ill of God (if God was claimed to be the deceiver). And so, perhaps, our sin (doubt, uncertainty) does not blemish the perfection of God’s creation — Antony Nickles
he does not start to prove the existence of the self, but to “prove” anything, to be certain in any regard. He has merely retreated to here. — Antony Nickles
And you say I must be right if I am conscious, which I take as not just conscious in the sense that I am awake, but “conscious of”, in that I am aware of the pain, which is a kind of knowing. But we can be suffering and not know it (be unaware), such as when we are in denial, but it is clear to our friends, or when I am cold but I focus on something else. — Antony Nickles
People tie themselves in knots with theories about the science of sensation and the brain, but, here, for Descartes, the actual mechanics and logic of sensation do not matter because it does not meet his requirement for certainty. I can either be incorrect that I sense something (“You’re not shot this time!” Or “It’s just a mirage!”) or mistaken in my judgment of what I sense (“You’re not angry, you’re jealous.” or “Whew, that felt like a spider!”), but, ultimately, I can deceive myself, be mistaken, or uncertain, and that will not do for Descartes as a foundation for our opinions. — Antony Nickles
Though some will continue to try to find a way in which our sensations or bodies are certain (@Janus), that could not avail us anyway, as there is no connection between how our senses (or any of science) could be the basis for true or certain customs and opinions anyway, which is the point of the Meditations. — Antony Nickles
Was reading over your conversation with Antony, and it is very interesting, and very much echoes Chomsky's interpretation of Descartes, which is that The Meditations were written, in a sense, so his physics would be taken seriously. — Manuel
Quoted from hereIn a letter to Mersenne, Descartes reveals:
...there are many other things in them; and I tell you, between ourselves, that these
six Meditations contain all the foundations of my physics. But that must not be
spread abroad, if you please; for those who follow Aristotle will find it more
difficult to approve them. I hope that [my readers] will accustom themselves
insensibly to my principles, and will come to recognize their truth, before
perceiving that they destroy those of Aristotle.
– René Descartes to Mersenne, January 28, 1641, Œuvres de Descartes,
3:297–98, quoted and translated by Hiram Caton in The Origin of
Subjectivity, 17
it seems to me that Descartes was quite confident that we are thinking things, so I do not think he would let go of the notion of the immortality of the soul. — Manuel
For a life-span can be divided into countless parts, each completely independent of the others, so that from my existing at one time it doesn’t follow that I exist at later times, unless some cause keeps me in existence – one might say that it creates me afresh at each moment.
Given your experience with the texts and Descartes, if you had to guess or even form a hypothesis, what interpretation would you lean in on? — Manuel
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