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PHL105Y November 7, 2005

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2. adventitious (produced by external sources) 3. invented (produced by me) ... It is not adventitious, because it doesn't come to me unexpectedly (contrast: my ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PHL105Y November 7, 2005


1
PHL105YNovember 7, 2005
  • For Wednesday, read Descartes Sixth Meditation
    (we are skipping the Fifth in class)
  • For Friday, write a page on one of the following
    questions (it will be collected).
  • On p.53, Descartes comments that the soul is not
    just in the body in the way a sailor is in a
    ship, but is commingled with it. What does he
    mean by that?
  • In the last paragraph of the Sixth Meditation,
    Descartes explains how we tell the difference
    between dreaming and waking life. How
    satisfactory do you find Descartes account of
    how we do this?

2
The first essay, final version
  • The final version of your first essay is due on
    Wednesday (November 9). Upload your essay to
    turnitin.com by Wednesday morning instructions
    on doing this are available on the course
    website.
  • Class ID 1395973
  • Class password republic all lower-case

3
Descartes Third Meditation
  • -The rule of clear and distinct ideas
  • -The existence of God

4
The starting point
  • The meditator knows that he exists.
  • He is aware of various ideas.
  • He is still supposing that he is dealing with the
    evil genius he cant trust his senses, and he
    cant trust his intellectual beliefs (other than
    the belief about his own existence, which is
    demon-proof).
  • What can he know?

5
The project
  • The meditator asks himself How did I come to
    know I exist?
  • Surely in this first instance of knowledge,
    there is nothing but a certain clear and distinct
    perception of what I affirm. Yet this would
    hardly be enough to render me certain of the
    truth of a thing, if it could ever happen that
    something I perceived so clearly and distinctly
    could be false.

6
The rule Descartes wants to prove
  • If its clear and distinct,
  • then its true

7
Getting rid of doubtsabout my intellect
  • If Descartes can prove that the origin of his
    nature is a perfect and trustworthy
    (non-deceiving) being, then he no longer has a
    reason to doubt his intellect.
  • Descartes new goal to prove that he was created
    by a non-deceiving, perfect God.

8
Taking stock of my ideas
  • I am aware that I have various ideas ideas of
    myself, chimeras, the sky, God, and so on
  • There are three possible kinds of ideas
  • 1. innate (built in to my nature)
  • 2. adventitious (produced by external sources)
  • 3. invented (produced by me)

9
Taking stock of ideas
  • The ideas I am aware of are not all the same
  • They all exist as modes of my thought
  • But some represent greater, and some represent
    lesser objects

10
My idea of God
  • Descartes basic move
  • The only way a finite being like me could have
    the idea of an infinite being, is if an infinite
    being really exists.

11
Is it true that my idea of God could only have
come from God?
  • Objection could I have gained the idea of the
    infinite just by taking some idea of the finite
    (say, the idea of me) and negating it?
  • No, because there is more reality in the idea of
    an infinite substance than a finite one.

12
A surprising claim
  • the perception of the infinite is somehow prior
    in me to the perception of the finite, that is,
    my perception of God is prior to my perception of
    myself. For how would I understand that I doubt
    and that I desire, that is, that I lack something
    and that I am not wholly perfect, unless there
    were some idea in me of a more perfect being, by
    comparison with which I might recognize my
    defects?

13
Is it true that my idea of God could only have
come from God?
  • Objection What if I somehow had infinite powers
    without realizing it, and so could create the
    idea of an infinite being on my own?

14
Is it true that my idea of God could only have
come from God?
  • Objection What if I somehow had infinite powers
    without realizing it, and so could create the
    idea of an infinite being on my own?
  • Reply I may have more power than I now
    recognize, e.g. I may gradually be increasing my
    knowledge, but God is entirely actual, rather
    than potential

15
The second proof
  • From what source do I derive my existence?

16
The second proof
  • From what source do I derive my existence?
  • From me?
  • From my parents?

17
The second proof
  • From what source do I derive my existence?
  • Even if my parents did bring me into existence,
    they dont sustain me from one instant to the
    next the same force and action are needed to
    preserve anything at each individual moment that
    it lasts as would be required to create that same
    thing anew (AT49)

18
The second proof
  • From what source do I derive my existence?
  • Could it be me, or some other finite cause, or
    some combination of finite causes?
  • No because I have an idea of a unified perfect
    being within me, I could only have been created
    by such a being.

19
Where does the idea of God come from?
  • Descartes thinks it is innate in us.
  • It is not invented, because we cant add or
    subtract to it (contrast my idea of my dream
    home)
  • It is not adventitious, because it doesnt come
    to me unexpectedly (contrast my idea of the
    oncoming car)

20
Free from deception?
  • it is quite obvious that he cannot be a
    deceiver, for it is manifest by the light of
    nature that all fraud and deception depend on
    some defect. (AT52)

21
The Cartesian Circle?
  • Descartes wants to prove that if its clear and
    distinct, then its true
  • But how can he do this unless he already trusts
    his clear and distinct perceptions as true? What
    else could he have to go on?

22
One reading of Descartes strategy
  • Descartes never stops using his basic rational
    principles even throughout the First Meditation,
    the doubts he generates are rational doubts he
    gives arguments about why each kind of claim
    should be doubted
  • He suspends judgments about specific deliverances
    of reason he does not quit the use of reason
    altogether

23
One reading of Descartes strategy
  • At the end of the First Meditation, Descartes
    casts doubt on reason by seeming to show that
  • 1. Reason leads us to affirm what is clear and
    distinct (if you think about it rationally, you
    want to affirm that squares are four-sided)
  • 2. Reason itself also leads us to doubt those
    very claims (if you think about it rationally,
    you decide you could be intellectually defective)
  • If reason leads to both X and not-X, theres a
    problem with reason. What Descartes wants to do
    is to show that (2) isnt true reason only seems
    to lead us to that kind of self-doubt. If you
    reason a bit more carefully, you see that a
    creature like you, with an idea of perfection,
    cannot be intellectually defective

24
What could Descartes be tryingto prove, anyway?
  • Could you prove that reason is reliable to a
    person who wanted to refuse to engage in any
    reasoning?

25
What could Descartes be tryingto prove, anyway?
  • Could you prove that reason is reliable to a
    person who wanted to refuse to engage in any
    reasoning?
  • Could you prove that reason is reliable to
    someone who thinks she has rational evidence that
    it could lead you astray?

26
What could Descartes be tryingto prove, anyway?
  • In order to prove anything at all, do you need to
    make some assumptions?
  • Do you need to assume that certain beliefs of
    yours are true? Do you need to assume that
    certain rules can be followed, or that certain
    argumentative rules are OK?
  • Note the First Meditation destroys all
    Descartes old beliefs it does not necessarily
    destroy his rationality, or the principles he
    follows (hes erasing all the files from his
    hard drive, not taking a sledghammer to the
    computer)

27
The Fourth Meditation
  • God and the problem of error

28
If my rationality is reliable,why do I make
mistakes?
  • Three claims Descartes is committed to
  • God does not deceive me
  • My faculty of judgment comes from God
  • I do make mistakes sometimes

29
Where does error come from?
  • God is perfect, but Im further down the scale.
  • Could error come from the simple fact that Im a
    limited being?
  • God gave me a faculty of judgment alright, but
    its a limited one

30
Where does error come from?
  • Pointing to the fact that Im finite isnt enough
    to explain error, because
  • error is not a pure negation but rather a
    privation or lack of some knowledge that somehow
    ought to be in me
  • Whats the difference between a negation and a
    privation?

31
Where does error come from?
  • Whats the difference between a negation and a
    privation?
  • Negation something I happen to lack, but neednt
    have had anyway I dont have five arms or
    wheels Im not twelve feet tall (because God
    made me this way and not that and theres no
    fault there Im not falling short of a standard)
  • Privation something I lack, but somehow should
    have had (I am falling short of a standard if
    God is responsible for a privation, hes somehow
    at fault)

32
An analysis of judgment
  • Judgments always involve the joint work of
  • The intellect, through which I perceive ideas
  • The will, which affirms or denies (or suspends
    judgment upon) what I perceive

33
An analysis of judgment
  • The intellect, taken on its own, is not the
    source of error (why not?)

34
An analysis of judgment
  • The intellect, taken on its own, is not the
    source of error (why not?)
  • -the intellect just presents ideas whether you
    contemplate an idea of yourself, a table, or the
    tooth fairy, you havent made an error until you
    judge it, until you say The tooth fairy exists.

35
An analysis of judgment
  • The will, taken on its own, is not defective (why
    not?)

36
An analysis of judgment
  • The will, taken on its own, is not defective (why
    not?)
  • It is just the power to affirm or deny any
    particular idea its an unlimited power for me
    I am always free to decide what to think
  • (what is freedom?)

37
What is freedom?
  • In order to be free I need not be capable of
    being moved in each direction on the contrary,
    the more I am inclined in one direction the
    more freely do I choose that direction.
  • AT57-8.

38
Where errors come from
  • Not from the intellect, on its own, nor from the
    will, on its own, but from my failure to align
    them properly
  • The intellect is fine as far as it goes, but it
    doesnt present me with a clear and distinct idea
    of everything (its finite)
  • Errors arise when I make judgments about things
    that are not clear and distinct

39
Whos to blame?
  • If I want to, I can avoid error entirely, all my
    life, by only judging what is clear and distinct
    to me
  • Note that God could have given me a clear and
    distinct idea about everything Id ever think
    about. Since he didnt, is he to blame for my
    mistakes?

40
Error and God
  • God could have made me free, finite, and
    infallible
  • He didnt do so, but hes not responsible for my
    mistakes (why not?)

41
Error and God
  • God could have made me free, finite, and
    infallible
  • He didnt do so, but hes not responsible for my
    mistakes (why not?)
  • Inescapable (built-in) human error would be a
    problem avoidable human error is not
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