Paul Ricoeur also raises this question of the nature of the "I" of the cogito -- whether what it is is self-evident as a consequence of the cogito. — J
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.
Why…. — frank
…thinking is something I do. That's not "nothing." — J
It tells me there is a thinker and I am it. And I am….what, exactly? — Mww
Is there an answer that doesn’t just invite another question?
Comprehension needs to be bestowed on something representing a particular accomplishment, iff one wishes to express himself in regard to it. The cognitive system, in and of itself, in its normal modus operandi, doesn’t require it, insofar as it just IS it. — Mww
any further knowledge about the self is unwarranted. — J
…..we automatically become dualists of some kind. — frank
How else would you say “disunity”? What other word carries similar implication? — Mww
Descartes has drawn what Ricoeur believes to be a false, or at any rate unwarranted, conclusion. — J
what is the unwarranted conclusion? — Fooloso4
As I understand it, doubting entails existence. Existing is a necessary condition for doubting. — Fooloso4
Whoever thinks, whoever doubts, whoever is subject to deception much exist. — Fooloso4
I would say the unwarranted conclusion has to do with an essential identity being attached to “thinking thing.” — J
Again, Ricoeur’s criticism is coming through Nietzsche and Freud. — J
Why may my self, my “I”, not just as well comprise the unconscious part of my being? — J
Why assume that the thinking thing , and all its activities, is the most important and most characteristic part of being a subject? — J
does suggest that Descartes believed that being a thing that thinks was an identity. It is the answer to his self-posed question, "Well, then, what am I?" Perhaps Ricoeur would answer the question this way: "I do not know what I am, on the basis of the cogito. I identify a number of activities I can perform as a conscious ego (doubting, understanding, et al.) and am at the same time aware of many other aspects of myself that lie hidden. Maybe the question 'What am I?' will prove unanswerable, or maybe I will discover that I have an essence. But either way, the cogito shows me nothing pro or con."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.
Is it unwarranted to conclude that he is a thing that thinks? Isn't thinking essential to being human? — Fooloso4
Why assume that the thinking thing , and all its activities, is the most important and most characteristic part of being a subject? — J
The Cogito points to the indubitability of the disunity part. — frank
What does this mean? Is it unwarranted to conclude that he is a thing that thinks? Isn't thinking essential to being human? — Fooloso4
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