Geoff's Miscellany

Descartes

Simplify Complex Problems Like Descartes

December 27, 2017

Ever Feel Stupid?

Many of us wish we were smarter than we are. Rene Descartes even felt this way:  

"For myself, I have never fancied my mind to be in any respect more perfect than those of the generality; on the contrary, I have often wished that I were equal to some others in promptitude of thought, or in clearness and distinctness of imagination, or in fullness and readiness of memory...I will not hesitate, however, to avow my belief that it has been my singular good fortune to have very early in life fallen in with certain tracks which have conducted me to considerations and maxims, of which I have formed a method that gives me the means, as I think, of gradually augmenting my knowledge, and of raising it by little and little to the highest point which the mediocrity of my talents and the brief duration of my life will permit me to reach."

David Bentley Hart, Rene Descartes, and my own Cartesian Intuitions

September 29, 2013

In his new book The Experience of God: Being, Consciousness, Bliss, David Bentley Hart notes that during the medieval era almost nobody thought that "the relation of soul and body was anything like a relation between two wholly independent kinds of substance: the ghost and its machine (which for what it is worth, was not really Descartes understanding of the relation either). (p. 168)" This is interesting to me because one of the chief critiques I had heard of Descartes is that he posited that humans are primarily "thinking things" and the mind interacts with the body almost incidentally. But I had always been intrigued when I read Descartes third meditation he notes this, "For since I am nothing but a thinking thing, or at least, since I am now dealing simply and precisely with the part of me that is a thinking thing, if such a power were in me [the power to create oneself from nothing], then I would surely be aware of it. (Third Meditation paragraph 49)"