Title: Meditations on First Philosophy
1Meditations on First Philosophy
2Meditation 1
- What can be called into doubt
3- Descartes overall project in the Meditations to
put human knowledge on a secure foundation - Observes that in his youth he believed many
falsehoods - Has decided to raze everything to the ground and
build up from more secure foundations - Procedure withold assent not just from
propositions he believes to be false, but also
from ones he cant be absolutely certain of
4- Skeptic one who doubts
- Descartes is not a skeptic in the end, but he
entertains skeptical doubt - Dialogue with a skeptic, in a single voice
- Again, wants to build up from new foundations
- Whats the old foundation? The senses
5Stage 1 Doubt The Senses
- The senses deceive us sometimes, so we should
never trust them - Examples of deception by the senses Optical
illusions, hearing things wrong, etc. - An attempt to resist this doubt Can I really
doubt that I am sitting here by the fire, etc.? - Pressing the doubt A madman might think all that
in error, and I might be mad
6Stage 1 Doubt, contd
- Resisting But I dont resemble a madman and
anyhow if Im mad theres no point carrying on
with this argument! - Pressing But I could be dreaming that I am
sitting by the fire etc. - Resisting But even if I am dreaming, I can be
sure that the elements of my dream-images are
real
7An Argument by Analogy
- In paintings we find images of things that arent
real - These images are composed from images of things
that are real - Or at least, from elements of images of things
that are real, like colors
- In dreams we find images of things that arent
real - These images are composed from images of things
that are real - Or at least, from elements of images of things
that are real, like extension, shape, size,
number
8Whats left after Stage 1 Doubt
- Conclusion of the argument by analogy we can be
sure at least that the simple, universal building
blocks are real - So maybe well be OK if we stick with those
intellectual pursuits that deal only with these
simple elements, namely arithmetic and geometry - Whether I am awake or asleep, 2 and 3 added
together make 5, and a square has only 4 sides
9Stage 2 Doubt Arithmetic and Geometry
- Stage 1 doubt leaves untouched our certainty that
2 3 5, and that a square has 4 sides stage 2
doubt is of precisely that. - Pressing God is omnipotent, so could He not
have made it the case that, on the one hand, I
believe that 2 3 5, and on the other, that 2
and 3 do not make 5?
10Stage 2 Doubt, Contd
- Resisting But an omnibenevolent God would not
deceive me thus! - Pressing We know that we are deceived sometimes,
so it is consistent with Gods goodness to
deceive us. Why then couldnt He deceive us about
arithmetic? - Resisting There must be something wrong with the
idea that God has so much power to deceive Ill
withold my belief from this notion of God, and
then I can at least be certain that 2 3 5
11- Pressing You wont achieve any certainty that
way! For if theres no omnipotent God, the cause
of your existence is something imperfect. If you
can go wrong when the cause of your existence is
a perfect, omnipotent God, still more can you go
wrong when the cause of your existence is
something imperfect. Anyhow, you can go wrong
either way!
12Temporary victory for the Skeptic (recap)
- If there is an omnipotent God, I can be wrong in
thinking that 2 3 5 - If there is no omnipotent God, I can be wrong in
thinking that 2 3 5 - Therefore, I can be wrong in thinking that 2 3
5 - So I can be certain of nothing there is not one
of my former beliefs about which a doubt may not
properly be raised
13Resisting the Temptation to Believe
- Descartes now has reasons to doubt everything
that he believes - But he finds that these reasons are inadequate to
overcome his habit of believing various highly
probable opinions - To keep himself on a straight path, he invents
the malicious demon
14The Malicious Demon Argument
- It is possible that a malicious demon is
systematically making me believe only falsehoods - So it is possible that all my beliefs are false
- So I have reason to doubt all my beliefs
15Meditation 2
- The nature of the human mind, and how it is
better known than the body
16What are you?
- The resident of xxx Main street
- The second child of Jane and John Doe
- The one wearing the red shirt
- The subject of this experience (of a tension
headache, a slight itch between the shoulder
blades, etc.) - The author of the thought Im now having, namely
that Descartes was no slouch - The subject of the feeling Im now experiencing,
namely one of happy nostalgia
17- One powerful idea about what you are you are
what you see when you introspect - Two ways to inquire about the self, and its
relation to the body - What am I thinking about when I think about
myselfis it something physical, or what? - Are mental phenomena like thinking and feeling
part of the physical world?
18Setting the scene
- Our hero, youll recall, is floundering in a
maelstrom of doubt - He wonders is there even one thing of which he
can be certain? - Let his doubt be granted the full scope he gave
it in Med I the deliverances of his senses and
of his reason are in question
19- Is Ds own existence in question, then, too? No
If I convinced myself of something then I
certainly existedI must finally conclude that
this proposition, I am, I exist, is necessarily
true whenever it is put forward by me or
conceived in my mind.
20- But what is this I? It must be purged of any
uncertainty - A rational animal? No good. (Whats rational?
Whats animal?) - He used to think of his body when he thought of
himself - He used to think also of his capacities to move
around, to be nourished, to sense and to think
21- As for his soul, it was something tenuous, like
a wind or fire or ether, which permeated his
more solid parts
22What survives the Malicious Demon Argument?
- Only thinking Thought this alone is
inseparable from me. I am, I exist that is
certain. But for how long? For as long as I am
thinkingI am, then, in the strict sense only a
thing that thinks
23Imagination rejected as a source of self-knowledge
- Is there more to the self than being a thinking
thing? - Perhaps he can use his imagination to discern
whatever else there might be - Imagination faculty of contemplating the image
of corporeal things - But all that he can be certain of in himselfthat
he is a thinking thingdepends in no way on
imagination
24What is a thinking thing? (A soul, for Descartes)
- A thing that
- Doubts
- Understands
- Affirms and denies
- Is willing and unwilling
- Imagines
- Has sensory perceptions
25Is a thinking thing really all that?
- Doubting, understanding, affirming/denying , and
being (un)willing all seem more naturally a part
of thinking than imagining and having sense
perceptions - For remember that imagining was simply
contemplating the shape of a corporeal thing - If the self is something of which he can be
certain, it must be independent of the corporeal
realmthe realm of bodiesof which he cannot be
certain
26Appearance vs. Reality
- The power of imagining can be divided into the
power of imagining and the experience of
imagining, on the one hand, and the objects of
imagination, on the other - Same for the senses theres the experience of
sensing, on the one hand, and things in the world
which cause those experiences (or not), on the
other
27- The first component in eachthe experiential
componentbelongs to the mental realm it does
not depend on having a body - I certainly seem to see, to hear, and to be
warmed. This cannot be false what is called
having a sensory perception is strictly just
this,and in this restricted sense of the term it
is simply thinking.
28The ball of wax
- Still he cannot shake the sense that knows
concrete physical things better than the
puzzling I - Consider, then, a piece of wax
- Most of what you think you know about it changes
when it melts - So what you really know about it is something
that doesnt change its extended, flexible,
changeable
29Seeing with the eyes, seeing with the mind
- He thought he saw the wax with your eyes, but all
he really know about it he understood - Cf. Seeing hats and coats, understanding them to
be men
30- If I judge that the wax exists from the fact
that I see it, clearly this same fact entails
much more evidently that I myself also exist. - If you judge, understand, know x, you exist
- So your belief in your own existence is better
confirmed than any of your other beliefs!