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08-06-2003, 10:58 PM | #11 | |
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I tend to agree, as in the Meditations lining up his God with the Christian concept seems forced at times. |
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08-07-2003, 01:52 PM | #12 | |
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I was taught that, basically, Descartres wanted to do science and physics, but didn't want to inspire the church to come after him; after all, D very much enjoyed his comfort. It seems that he wrote his meditations in such a way as to appease the church officials, but not in a way that compromised his own religious ideals. In the preface to Meditations he states that the primary subject matter will be god and the human soul, but in the first meditation he says that he is going to establish a firm foundation of science. Descartes has arguments for god's existence, albeit weak ones, but I agree with Clutch that he seems perfectly Thomistic and, therefore, with xian orthodoxy. |
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08-07-2003, 04:47 PM | #13 | |
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_____________________________ *In point of fact, most philosophers these days regard his arguments for the existence of god as fallacious, which only tends to get people to have more doubts about the existence of god, when otherwise people may be more prone to just have "faith" (i.e., believe without evidence). |
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08-07-2003, 05:46 PM | #14 | |
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Much more likely was that Descartes in the Meditations was cagey in part just because he wanted to guard against some influential reader getting twitchy about the wrong preposition here and there; but mostly because he already knew his physics put him out on a limb -- due its anti-Thomistic/anti-Aristotelian character. Finally, while Descartes' arguments are often textbook fallacies, the picture he ends up with is almost beautiful in its fit with Christian theology. We overcome scepticism because God would not allow us to be systematically deceived; but we are capable of error because, while our rational faculties are perfect, our will is corrupt. So we often assent to propositions that our reasoning would reject if mastered by a perfect will. It dovetails so precisely with so many different aspects of Christianity that (I conjecture) it must have struck Descartes as a kind of inference to the best explanation -- enabling him to hold his nose and run some really messy arguments up the flagpole. In its own way, it is a generous and optimistic image of humanity's participation in God's perfection through the use of our intellect. |
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08-07-2003, 05:53 PM | #15 | |
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08-07-2003, 05:56 PM | #16 | |
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08-08-2003, 10:06 AM | #17 | |
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08-10-2003, 03:39 PM | #18 | |
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