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Descartes' method of doubt?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.3
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10.3.18 cards
Descartes' method of doubt?
Deliberately doubting everything that can be doubted, so that whatever survives must be certain.
The three waves of doubt?
The senses deceive → the dream argument (can't prove you're awake) → the evil demon (could fake even maths).
The dream argument?
Dreams feel just as real as waking, so you can't be certain you're awake — even ordinary beliefs wobble.
The evil demon?
An imagined all-powerful deceiver used to doubt even simple truths like 2 + 3 = 5 — the hardest test for certainty.
What is certainty for Descartes?
A belief that cannot possibly be false — not just likely, but immune even to an all-powerful deceiver.
Is Descartes a sceptic?
No — he uses doubt as a tool to rebuild knowledge on certain foundations, not to abandon it.
Why is the doubt called 'methodological'?
It's a deliberate, pretended doubt used as a filter — not a real loss of belief.
The apple-basket image?
Tip out every apple and only return the sound ones — that's Descartes clearing beliefs to keep only the certain.
10.3.28 cards
The cogito?
'I think, therefore I am' — even a deceived mind must exist to be deceived, so a thinking thing certainly exists.
Why can't the cogito be doubted?
To doubt it you must think, and to think you must exist — so doubting it proves it.
What does the cogito actually prove?
Only that you are a thinking thing (a mind) — not that you have a body or that the world is real.
Res cogitans?
A 'thinking thing' — a mind that doubts, believes, wills, imagines and senses.
Why is the cogito Descartes' foundation?
It's the first belief to survive the evil demon, so all rebuilt knowledge stands on it.
Is the cogito 'self-proving'?
Yes — the act of doubting it is itself thinking, which proves a thinker exists.
The narrowness of the cogito (Go further)?
It proves existence only in the present moment of thinking — not that you existed yesterday or will tomorrow.
Cogito vs the body?
The cogito proves a mind exists; the body is still doubted and only recovered much later.
10.3.38 cards
Descartes' dualism?
Mind and body are two really distinct kinds of thing: the mind thinks, the body is extended.
Res cogitans?
The mind — a thinking, unextended thing (it doesn't take up space).
Res extensa?
The body — an extended, physical thing (it takes up space but doesn't think).
The wax argument?
Heat the wax and every sensed quality changes, yet you judge it's the same wax — so the mind, not the senses, grasps what it is.
What does the wax argument conclude?
The mind grasps what things truly are, and so is even better known than the body.
The 'really distinct' argument?
I can clearly conceive mind without body and body without mind, so God could make them exist apart — they're two things.
The weak spot in 'really distinct' (Go further)?
Being able to CONCEIVE them apart may only show they seem separable, not that they really are (Arnauld's worry).
Mind vs body for Descartes?
You HAVE a body (extended) but you ARE a mind (thinking) — the mind is what you essentially are.
10.3.48 cards
Why does Descartes prove God?
The cogito proves only his mind; a non-deceiving God is needed to rule out the demon and restore the world.
The trademark (causal) argument?
My idea of a perfect being is too great for imperfect me to have made, so a perfect being (God) must have caused it.
Why 'trademark'?
The idea of perfection is stamped in us by our maker, like a craftsman's mark on their work.
How does God restore the world?
A perfect God won't deceive, so my strong natural belief that an external world exists can't be a lie.
Clear and distinct ideas?
Ideas so sharp I can't doubt them while attending to them — a non-deceiving God guarantees they're true.
A perfect God and deception?
Deceiving is a defect, and God is all-good, so God is no deceiver — the key premise for the rebuild.
Descartes' rebuild in order?
Cogito → God exists → God is no deceiver → clear ideas are true → the external world is real.
The Cartesian circle looming (Go further)?
He uses clear ideas to prove God, then uses God to guarantee clear ideas — the system's biggest objection.
10.3.58 cards
What does 'evaluate' (Paper 2 part b) ask for?
Test the reasoning of a claim — weigh reasons for and against — and reach a reasoned judgement.
The Cartesian circle?
Descartes proves God from clear and distinct ideas, then uses God to guarantee clear ideas — apparent circularity.
The memory defence to the circle?
Maybe God is only needed to trust MEMORIES of past clear ideas, not present ones — softens but may not remove the circle.
The interaction problem?
If the mind is unextended and the body physical, how can one move the other? Raised by Princess Elisabeth.
Which parts of Descartes' system survive best?
The method of doubt and the cogito largely hold; the God-proofs and the rebuilt world are the weakest links.
How is Paper 2 examined?
Open-book, one hour: a two-part question on your text — (a) Explain a concept [10] + (b) Evaluate a claim [15].
Open-book exam tip?
Don't copy long quotes — use the text to SUPPORT understanding and argument; do the right job in each part.
The shape of a top part (b)?
Explain the claim, argue for it, raise the objection, weigh them, and conclude with a reason tied to the text.
Topic 10.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Meditations on First Philosophy — Descartes
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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