• flannel jesus
    1.8k
    Personally, I feel like it's better to think of the cogito as a poem, rather than a complete thought. I think the ego-less interpretation fits within Descartes thought process well enough already, as long as you're willing to let the word 'I' have some wiggle room. That's why I'm not personally using that as a basis to disagree with the cogito.
  • ENOAH
    843


    I fully agree with you. At the risk of offending, I think the poetry metaphor applies to much metaphysics. Perhaps not in the conventional way we view poetry. But, at the end of the day, isn't metaphysics necessarily metaphorical? This does not mean it is not deeply enriching to our particular form of existence. On the contrary, like all art, it is very enriching.
  • Lionino
    2.7k
    You are correct about his conclusion fitting the present. But this "I" which "is," is not the same "I" as the "I" which was nanoseconds ago thinking. The "I" is successive. Just as there isnt really a linear narrative, there are only successive nows.ENOAH

    For Descartes, ultimately, duration is an attribute of a substance, so it would remain through time; but for him, that is only possible because God allows it. It is a convoluted double cop-out, and the two parts don't seem like they fit here. Which is why I made this thread a while ago https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/14823/reasons-for-believing-in-the-permanence-of-the-soul/p1

    Descarte's discovery was really "thinking therefore is-ing,." It does not rest thus no "am"; it does not rest thus no "I".ENOAH

    There are additional issues to that. When we conclude that that thought isn't ours and we only have a memory of it, we can no longer conclude that anything exists, as that memory is no proof of anything thinking; if anything, it is proof that I exist, because I am remembering it, and remembering is thinking. Furthermore, "someone thinks therefore something is" is a phrase, it is hard to articulate (and perhaps that is the issue) how that phrase translates to thoughts, ¿is it a single thought or 2+ thoughts one after the other? If the latter, perhaps the first "something" is not the same as the second "something".
    If the former, when we say "I think" in "I think therefore I am", we can be talking about "I think therefore I am" itself, then it can be taken as self-fulfilling.
    bertrand-russell-389721.jpg

    Sadly, this thread has reached 1.1 replies.
  • ENOAH
    843


    Very informative.
    Also, dishearteningly, so.
    Logic. Damn!
    It seems there is no place for the thinker to rest their weary head.
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    I think the "problem" with Descarte's thought experiment is the "I".ENOAH

    Just adding to the "Same." chorus. :up:
  • ENOAH
    843


    ...unless Descartes was stating the discovery from his meditations is that "he" is a thinking thing.

    In which case he could just as easily conclude that he is a breathing thing; a heartbeats thing; and so on, shaved down to the is-ing thing.

    But no. Not if it was he who simultaneously decided he was a dualist. Was it he? Or did we superimpose that upon him?
  • Banno
    25k
    Personally, I feel like it's better to think of the cogito as a poemflannel jesus

    Is the poem sufficient to give you 100% certainty?
  • flannel jesus
    1.8k
    I read the poem and figure out what it means. It's not the poem that gives certainty.
  • Banno
    25k
    It's not the poem that gives certainty.flannel jesus

    Then what?
  • flannel jesus
    1.8k
    The stuff that's already been talked about. I must exist in order to think. I think. Therefore I am.

    I can be certain I'm thinking, and existing.

    The poem doesn't grant certainty, the poem is just a poem. The poem is there to trigger you to think.
  • Banno
    25k
    So you think of the Cogito as a poem, and are not convinced by it, but by the argument you find in it?

    I don't follow that.

    The poem doesn't grant certainty, the poem is just a poem.flannel jesus
    So what grants certainty? Is "I must exist in order to think" an inference? Or an intuition?
  • flannel jesus
    1.8k
    I don't follow that.Banno

    You don't follow what? That this poem is stated as concisely at possible for aesthetic purposes, but implies a more complete argument within?

    So what grants certainty?Banno

    My thoughts. My thoughts grant certainty to me. Descartes thoughts grant certainty to him.
  • Banno
    25k
    That this poem is stated as concisely at possible for aesthetic purposes, but implies a more complete argument within?flannel jesus

    So it's a poem and an argument? In your own words, it's not
    a complete thoughtflannel jesus
    You were convinced by an incomplete thought?

    My thoughts grant certainty to me.flannel jesus
    All of them, or just the incomplete ones?
  • flannel jesus
    1.8k
    I feel like you're asking me a bunch of questions you already know the answers to. This whole "incomplete thought" "poem" line of questions. It doesn't seem very serious to me.
  • Banno
    25k
    It doesn't seem very serious to me.flannel jesus
    Walk away, then.

    The question is, what can I know with 100% certainty? You seem to be claiming the Cogito as the source of your certainty. I'm asking how that works. What you have said in the last few posts does not appear coherent.
  • flannel jesus
    1.8k
    you asked questions, got answers to your questions, and kept asking the same questions again. It's not a serious thing, you're clearly not being serious.
  • Banno
    25k
    So you are convinced by incomplete thoughts. Ok.

    I don't think it is I who is not being serious.
  • flannel jesus
    1.8k
    That is a very unserious comment to make given what's been said

    I told you what I am convinced by, and I didn't say it was an incomplete thought.
  • Banno
    25k


    You said:

    "the cogito as a poem, rather than a complete thought"
    "It's not the poem that gives certainty"
    "this poem... implies a more complete argument within"
    "My thoughts grant certainty to me"

    So, what is the compete argument that grants you certainty? Presumably: "I must exist in order to think". But that is not an argument, or at the least is not valid. Sure, something is doing the thinking. Why presume it is you?

    Are you just stipulating that you are the thinking?

    But then, why did you laugh at the suggestion from @Corvus that you cease to exist when not thinking?

    Presumably for you all this holds together somehow. I'm not seeing it.
  • Banno
    25k
    I fully agree with you.ENOAH
    Then perhaps you might explain it to me?

    isn't metaphysics necessarily metaphorical?ENOAH
    Are you suggesting that the arguments in the Second Meditation are metaphors? Metaphors for what? They look very much like arguments to me.
  • Banno
    25k
    I do not have access tot he full article. What do they take Russell's argument to be, and why do they reject it?

    Ooo I take that back. I hadn't logged in. And now the reply I write as an edit to this post has gone into the aether.

    Roughly, I take Russell as making a point about the illegitimacy of the move from "Something is thinking" to "I exist". See https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logic-free/#inexp
  • Lionino
    2.7k
    Sure, something is doing the thinkingBanno

    Unless I know it is me, I can't say it is thinking, as I only have access to my own thoughts, not anyone else's.

    When we conclude that that thought isn't ours and we only have a memory of it, we can no longer conclude that anything exists, as that memory is no proof of anything thinking; if anything, it is proof that I exist, because I am remembering it, and remembering is thinking.Lionino

    why did you laugh at the suggestion from Corvus that you cease to exist when not thinking?Banno

    Because things don't cease to exist when they don't think. And his suggestion was based on denying the antecedent, which is bunk.
  • Banno
    25k
    Because things don't cease to exist when they don't think.Lionino

    Well, they do if they are by definition thinking things. That's rather the point. It seems that the defenders of the Cogito now want something like "I am by definition that which thinks", which is not "I think therefore I am", and which has it's own difficulties. In particular, the bit where you stop existing when you go to sleep.

    Yes, you went into great lengths about the difference between extended substance and cognitive substance, but having to invoke dualism to solve this issue counts against the whole enterprise.
  • Fire Ologist
    713
    My general take is that there is no good way to say what the cogito is trying to say. But at the same time, what it is trying to say can’t be denied, and so is useful to science.
  • Banno
    25k
    My general take is that there is no good way to say what the cogito is trying to say. But at the same time, what it is trying to say can’t be denied.Fire Ologist

    But it is denied...

    Here's my position again. The enterprise of the Second Meditation relies on doubt, and doubt is a language game. Doubting some proposition implies a range of other propositions which are held to be true - if only those that set the doubt out. Hence doubt is only possible if some things are held to be indubitable.

    The things which need to be taken as granted in order to accept the Cogito include far more than one'e existence. One has to be a member of a language community...

    And all this is to show that the very idea of finding some foundation that is "100% certain" is somewhat fraught.
  • Fire Ologist
    713

    Yup. It’s hard to say anything without presupposing. Even hard for you to say “It is denied” without presupposing all of the logic and games surrounding the words involved.

    So it is hard to say what Descartes was trying to say. Established that. Cogito isn’t perfect. But you haven’t denied the existence of saying (something, anything, any game), and the saying is all you need to see what is said about existence.
  • Banno
    25k
    , your post here: sets out a denial of the need for hyperbolic doubt, while seemingly defensive of the Cogito.

    But if you are saying "I am" will do, without the "I think, therefore...", then we can agree.
  • Fire Ologist
    713
    I am.
    ..saying that.

    I have been.
    …saying that.

    I say, therefore I am.
    (Just ignore the “therefore” if the game of expressing “I say” or “I am” as a conclusion rather than a premise or just a present fact is no fun.)
  • Janus
    16.3k
    P = I think, therefore I exist.
    Q = I don't think, therefore I don't exist.

    P - > Q
    Not Q (Q is FALSE)
    therefore Not P (P is FALSE)
    Corvus

    You have this wrong. The logically entailed negation of 'I think, therefore I exist' is 'I don't exist, therefore I don't think' not 'I don't think therefore I don't exist'.

    It's a rookie mistake you're making.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.