Will Durant --- René Descartes (1596 - 1650)

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Rene Descartes 1596 to 1650 first of all he had a Jesuit education which has been the starting point and whetstone and French heretics from Descartes through Voltaire to Renault and Anatole France in the temple were forged the hammers which destroyed the temple he was born at La in Turin his mother died of tuberculosis a few days later he inherited the disease from her as an infant he was so pale and weak and coughed so pitifully that the physician offered no hope of saving him a nurse would not give him up as lost she gave him the warmth and nourishment of her body he came back to life and perhaps for that reason he was called Rene Rene TISS reborn his father was a prosperous lawyer a counsellor of the Parliament of Rennes who at his death left his son an income of 6,000 francs per year at the age of 8 he was entered in the Jesuit College of la flesche which says an ardent free thinker and famous mathematician seems to have given him a much better grounding in mathematics than he could have got at most universities at that time his teachers recognized his physical weakness and mental alertness they allowed him to remain in bed beyond rising hours and noted that he used the time to devour one book after another in all his metaphysical wanderings he never lost his admiration for the Jesuits and in their turn they took his doubts with paternal indulgence at 17 he went to Paris to sow Wild Oats he found that he had none to so being as yet indifferent to women but as a devoted mathematician he took to gambling figuring that he could break the casino bank he went on to the University of poitiers where he received degrees in civil and canon law having gained health and strength he amazed his friends by enlisting in the army of Prince Maurice of Nassau 1618 when the 30 Years War gathered impetus he joined the forces of Maximilian Duke of Bavaria an uncertain tradition pictures him as having taken part in the Battle of the white mountain amid these campaigns and especially in the long months when winter interrupted slaughter Picard continued his studies especially of mathematics one day November 10 1619 at no Bourque near Ulm in Bavaria he escaped the cold by shutting himself up in a stove probably an especially heated room there he tells us he had three visions or dreams in which he saw flashes of light and heard thunder it seemed to him that some divine spirit was revealing to him a new philosophy when he emerged from that stove he had he assures us formulated analytical geometry and had conceived the idea of applying the mathematical method to philosophy he returned it to France in 1622 arranged his finances and set out again on travels he spent almost a year in Italy went some say on foot from Venice to Loretto paid his tribute to the virgin saw Rome in the 1625 Jubilee passed through Florence did not visit Galileo and came back to Paris there and in the countryside he pursued scientific studies he accompanied the mathematician and military engineers gerard de zarg to the siege of La Rochelle 1628 later in that year he moved to Holland and barring some visits to France for business purposes he spent nearly all the remainder of his life in the United Provinces we do not know why he left France possibly having shown forth his reasons for doubting many things he feared accusations of heresy and yet he had many ecclesiastical friends they're like Mersenne and be rule perhaps he sought to avoid friends as well as enemies hoping to find in an alien land the social but not intellectual isolation in which he could give form to the philosophy that was sealing within him he disliked the bustle and prattle of Paris but did not mind the busy traffic soft peddled by canals of Amsterdam there in the crowded throng of a great and very active people he says he could live as solitary and retired as in deserts the most remote it may have been to conceal himself still further that he changed his habitat 24 times in the next 20 years from Fran occur to Amsterdam to Deventer to Amsterdam to Utrecht to Leiden but usually near a university or a library his income allowed him to live comfortably in a small Chateau with several servants he avoided marriage but took a mistress 16:34 who bore him a daughter we are pleased to hear that when this daughter died at the age of five descartes wept humanely we should err if we thought of him as coldly unconcerned with mundane affairs we shall find him justifying many of the passions that moralists normally condemned he had some himself being subject to pride anger and vanity it took a proud spirit to dare his scope consider what he undertook mathematics physics astronomy anatomy physiology psychology metaphysics epistemology ethics theology who would venture today on such a circumnavigation for this he coveted seclusion made experiments equations diagrams weighed his chances of escaping or appeasing the Inquisition and sought to give mathematical method to his philosophy and philosophical method to his life where should he commence in the epical discord a lama told he announced the first principle that in itself could have brought the world of authority down upon his head all the more so since the essay was written in readily intelligible French and in an animated captivating first-person style here were many revolutions he would begin he said by rejecting all doctrines and dogmas putting aside all authorities especially of Ely philosophers the philosopher Aristotle he would start with a clean slate and doubt everything they only boosts do be tandem the chief cause of our errors is to be found in the prejudices of our childhood principles of which I allowed myself in youth to be persuaded without having inquired into their truth but if he doubted everything how could he proceed in love with mathematics above all with geometry which his own genius was transforming he aspired to find after his initial and universal doubt some fact which would be admitted as generally and readily as the axioms of Euclid Archimedes in order that he might draw the terrestrial globe out of its place and transported elsewhere demanded that only one point should be fixed and immovable in the same way I shall have the right to conceive high hopes if I am happy enough to discover one thing only which is certain and indisputable he hit upon it exalting Li japones dolger Sui cogito ergo sum I think therefore I am the most famous sentence in philosophy it was intended not as a syllogism but as an immediate and irrigable experience the clearest and most distinct idea that we can ever have other ideas should be considered true in proportion as they approach this primal intuition this direct perception in distinctness and clarity des cartes new method in philosophy is Novum organum was to analyze complex conceptions into their constituents until the irreducible elements are simple clear distinct ideas and to show that all such basic ideas can be derived from or can depend upon the primary consciousness of a being that it thinks conversely we should try to deduce from this primary perception all the fundamental principles of philosophy it was again a revolution in philosophy that Descartes took as his starting point not external objects supposedly known but the conscious self the Renaissance had rediscovered the individual Descartes made him the hitching post of his philosophy I see clearly that there is nothing which is easier for me to know than my own mind if we begin with mater and rise through levels of organic life to man we shall be tempted by the logic of continuity to interpret mind as material but mater is known to us only through mind only mind is known directly here begins modern idea lism not as idealism in an ethical sense but as a philosophy that starts with the immediate fact of ideas rather than with things known through ideas Descartes sets the epistemological theme of modern European philosophy no more useful inquiry can be proposed than that which seeks to determine the nature and scope of human knowledge now for three centuries philosophy would wonder if the external world exists except as idea for just as it is difficult to pass from body to mind with any Theory that does justice both to the apparently material source and agency of sensations and to the apparently immaterial nature of ideas so Descartes having begun with the self finds it difficult to pass from mind to things how does the mind know that the sensations that seem to attest an external world are anything more than its own States how can it trust the senses which so often deceive us or the mental images that are just as vivid when false in sleep as when true in the day to escape from this solipsistic prison of the self Descartes appeals to God who surely would not make our whole sensory equipment and deception but when did God come into this that began so boldly by doubting all received beliefs Descartes cannot prove the existence of God from evidences of design in the external world for he has not yet shown the existence of that world so Descartes evolves God out of the knowing self very much as on Selma done in the ontological proof six centuries before I have he says a conception of a perfect being omniscient omnipotent necessary and eternal but that which exists is more nearly perfect than that which does not therefore a perfect being must include existence among his attributes and who could have put that idea into me but God himself it is not possible that I should have in myself the idea of a god if god did not veritably exist for if god were a deceiver he would not be perfect therefore he does not deceive us when we have clear and distinct ideas nor when he allows our senses to reveal to us an external world I do not see how he could be defended from the accusation of deceit if these ideas were produced by causes other than corporeal objects hence we must allow that corporeal things exist so the gap between mind and matters subject and object is marvelously closed and Descartes by the help of God becomes a real list science itself are a confident belief in a logical order li law-abiding calculable universe becomes possible only because God exists and cannot lie as we follow Descartes we see the infant age of Reason recoiling and fear from the hazards of thought and seeking to re-enter the warm womb of faith the middie Tatiana's was reassuringly entitled the meditations of rene descartes on first philosophy in which the existence of God and the immortality of the soul are demonstrated and the book was dedicated to the very sage and illustrious Dean of the sacred faculty of theology of Paris that is the Sorbonne the Dean accepted the dedication but in 1662 the volume was placed on the index of prohibited books until it is corrected it began on the st. braved notice the D score today since I have procured for myself an assured leisure and a peaceful retreat I shall at last freely and seriously addressed myself to the general upheaval of all my former opinions he throws them out the window and then lets them in at the door and not only the belief in a just and omnipotent God but also a human will free amid universal mechanism and a soul immortal despite its apparent dependence upon mortal flesh yield as we must to the logic of an unbreakable chain of cause and effect in the world of matter and body the freedom of our wills is one of those innate ideas which are so clear and distinct so vivid and immediate that no one ever doubts them in practice however much he may play with them an abstract theory the idea of God of the self of space-time and motion and the axioms of mathematics all these are innate that is the soul derives them not from sensation or experience but from its own essence and rationality here Lockwood de mer and Kant would applaud however these innate ideas may remain unconscious until experience startles them into conscious form the soul then is not a product of experience but it's active and originated partner in the production of thought this rational soul the ability to reason is clearly a material its ideas have no length breadth position weight or any other of the qualities that belong to matter this me that is to say the soul by which I am what I am is essentially distinct from the body and is even easier to know than the latter therefore this immaterial mind or soul can and surely does survive the body were these Orthodox conclusions sincere or were they protective coloration was descartes so anxious to pursue his scientific studies in unpursued but he exuded metaphysics like some befuddling mist to hamper birds of prey we cannot say it is possible for a man to be a good scientist at least in physics chemistry and astronomy if not in biology and at the same time accept the basic doctrines of Christianity in one passage Descartes affirmed that reason does not prevent us from believing matters that have been divinely revealed as being more certain than our surest knowledge his correspondence with princes palates and Elizabeth is eloquently pious and Orthodox Sal maecius visiting him at Leiden in 1637 described him as a most zealous Catholic and yet the last decade of his life was dedicated to science he turned his rooms into a laboratory and made experiments in physics and physiology when a visitor asked to see his library Descartes pointed to a quarter of veal that he was dissecting at times he spoke like bacon of the great practical benefits that would accrue to mankind when science had made men the Masters and possessors of nature his subjective emphasis sent his confidence in deduction often led him to dubious conclusions but he worked creatively in several sciences he insisted that science should replace the vague and qualitative abstractions of medieval physics with quantitative explanations in mathematical form we have noted his development of analytical geometry and his adumbration of infinitesimal calculus he solved the problems of doubling a cube and trisect in an angle he established the use of the first letters of the alphabet to represent known and of the last letters to represent unknown quantities he seems to have discovered the law of refraction independently of Snell he studied fruitfully great forces exerted by small means as by the pulley the wedge the lever the vise and the wheel and he formulated laws of inertia impact and impetus he may have suggested to Pascal that atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude though he was mistaken in declaring the vacuum existed nowhere except in Pascal's head he suggested that every body is surrounded by vortices of particles whirling about it in spherical layers a conception not unlike the present theory of magnetic fields in optics he correctly calculated the angle of refraction he analyzed the changes to which light is subjected by the crystalline lens of the eye he solved the problem of correcting spherical aberration in telescopes and designed lenses with elliptical or hyperbolic curvature free from such aberration he dissected and anatomically described a fetus he dissected he tells us the heads of various animals in order to ascertain in what memory imagination etc consist he made experiments in reflex action and explained the mechanism by which the eye winks at the approach of a blow he developed a theory of the emotions resembling that of William James and Carl Langa the external cause of the emotion for example our sight of a dangerous animal automatically and simultaneously generates a responsive action flight and the corresponding emotion fear the emotion is the accompaniment not the cause of the action the passions are rooted in physiology and should be studied and explained as mechanical operations they are not in themselves bad for they are the wind in our sails but when not moderated by reason they can enslave and ruin a personality the whole universe except God and the rational soul may be viewed as mechanical remembering Galileo and the Inquisition Descartes is careful to present the idea as hypothetical assuming that God has created matter and endowed it with motion we can imagine the world evolving thereafter by the laws of mechanics without interference the natural movement of material particles in a universe without a vacuum would take a circular form resulting in diverse vortices or whirlpools of motion the Sun the planets and the stars may have been formed by the concentration of particles at the Centers of these vortices just as every body is surrounded by a world of fine atoms which explains cohesion and attraction so each planet is enclosed in a vortex of particles that holds its satellites in orbit the Sun is the center of a vast four techs in which the planets are swept around it in circles it was an ingenious theory but it fell apart when kepler proved that the planetary orbits are elliptical Descartes proposed that if our knowledge were complete we should be able to reduce not only astronomy and physics and chemistry but all the operations of life except reason itself two mechanical laws respiration digestion even sensation are mechanical see how beneficent Li this principle worked in Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood Descartes confidently applied the mechanical conception to all the operations of animals for he refused to credit them with the power of reasoning he may have felt religiously compelled to do this injustice to animals for he had based the immortality of the soul upon the immateriality of the rational mind and if animals too had such Minds they too would be immortal which might be an inconvenience if not the dog lovers at least the theologians but if the human body is a material machine how can the immaterial mind act upon it or govern it by so unmechanical a power as free will at this point Descartes lost his confidence he answered desperately that God arranges the interaction of body and mind in mysterious ways beyond our finite understanding perhaps he suggested the mind acts upon the body through the pineal gland which is appropriately situated at the middle base of the brain the rascist act in de cartes life was his request to Mersenne to send advance copies of the midi tat Sione's to various thinkers with an invitation to submit criticisms Gassendi in reply demolished they carts contentions with Gallic courtesy the priest was not convinced by the ontological argument for the existence of God hobbes objected that Descartes had not proved the minds independence of matter and the brain privately according to Aubrey Hobbes was want to say that had Descartes kept himself holy to geometry he had been the best geometry in the world but that his head did not lie for philosophy - agreed with Hobbes and thought that Descartes had woven a romance out of metaphysical webs it is simple now profiting from three centuries of discussion to point out weaknesses in this brave first modern system of philosophy the idea of reducing philosophy to geometrical form condemned Descartes to a deductive method in which despite his experiments he relied too recklessly on his flair for reasoning to make the clarity distinctness vividness and immediacy of an idea the test of its truth was suicidal for on that basis who would dare deny the revolution of the Sun around the earth to argue that God exists because we have a clear and distinct idea of a perfect and infinite being do we and then to argue that clear and distinct ideas are trustworthy because God would not deceive us is a form of reasoning as circular and dubious is de cartes planetary orbits this philosophy is dripping with the medieval scholastic conceptions that it proposed to reject on tenures doubt was more basic and lasting than that of Descartes who merely removed traditional nonsense to make room for his own even so there remained enough in his science if not in his metaphysics to make him fear persecution his theory of universal mechanism left miracles and freewill in a parlous state despite his professions of Orthodox belief when he heard of Galileo's condemnation June 16 33 he put aside the major work Lamond in which he had planned to unite all his scientific work and results he wrote sadly to Mersenne this is so strongly affected me that I have almost resolved to burn all my manuscript or at least to show it to no one if it the motion of the earth is false all the principles of my philosophy of world mechanism are erroneous since they mutually support one another but I'll now account will I publish anything that contains a word that might displease the church at his death only a few fragments of Lomond could be found the attack came not in his lifetime from the Roman Church but from the Calvinist theologians in the Universities of Utrecht and Leiden they considered his defense of free will as a heresy dangerous to predestination ISM and they saw in his mechanical cosmogony a descent to within a step of atheism if the universe could get along with merely an initial impetus from God it was only a matter of time till God would be absolved from that inaugural push in 1641 when a utrecht professor adopted the cartesian system the rector of the university he spared me sheis persuaded the city magistrates to ban the new philosophy Descartes retorted with an attack upon vicious who answered bitterly and was rebutted by Descartes the magistrates summoned the philosopher to appear before them 16:43 he refused to come judgment was passed against him but his friends at The Hague intervened and the magistrates contented themselves with the decree forbidding any further public argument either for or against de cartes ideas he was consoled by the friendship of princess Elisabeth who with her mother Electra spalatin Elisabeth the de throned queen of Bohemia was living at The Hague the princess was 19 when the D score appeared 1637 she read it with delighted surprise that philosophy could be so intelligible and Descartes meeting her saw with delight that metaphysics could be beautiful he dedicated to her the Principia philosophy a in terms of enraptured flattery she ended as an abbess in Westphalia 1680 not quite so happy in Holland as before Descartes now frequently visited France 1644 1647 1648 his patriotism was stirred by a pension from the new government of louis xiv 1646 he angled for a post in the administration but the approach of civil war the Fronde frightened him back to Holland in February 1649 he received an invitation from Queen Christina of Sweden to come and teach her philosophy he hesitated but was attracted by her letters which revealed an excellent French and eager mind already won to the dear delight she sent an admiral to coax him than a warship to fetch him he yielded and in September he sailed from Amsterdam for Stockholm he was received with every honor but was alarmed to find that the Queen wish to be instructed three times a week always at five o'clock in the morning Descartes had long been accustomed to lie late in bed for two months he conformed to the Royal schedule walking through the winter dawn and snow from his rooms to the Queen's library on February 1st 1650 he caught a cold which became pneumonia on February 11th he died after receiving the last rites of the Catholic Church he had taken as a motto bene Vicks eat qui bein ela to eat he has lived well who has hidden well but his fame had become international many years before his death the universities rejected his philosophy and the clergy sniffed heresy in his piety but scientists applauded his mathematics and physics and the fashionable world in Paris took up with pleasure the works that he had written in lucid and engaging French Moliere laughed at the firm savant who bandied vortices in salons but could not endure a vacuum the Jesuit said heretofore been tolerant of their brilliant pupil they had silenced one of their number who had attacked him but after 1640 they withdrew their protection and in 1663 they were instrumental in having his works placed on the index both way and Finland welcomed de cartes proofs of the basic Christian beliefs but saw danger to faith in resting it on reason Pascal denounced the reliance on reason as a reed shaken by the wind it was precisely this Cartesian trust in reason that stirred the mind of Europe fontanelle summed up the matter it is Descartes who gave us a new method of reasoning much more admirable than his philosophy itself in which a large part is false or very doubtful according to the very rules that he has taught us the Cartesian doubt did for France for the continent in general what Bacon had done for England it freed philosophy from the barnacles of time and said it bravely sailing the open sea even if in Descartes it soon returned to safe and familiar ports not that there was any immediate victory for reason through Frances most brilliant age the ground siècle of louis xiv tradition and scripture more than held their own it was the epoch of pour Royale Pascal and puss way rather than of des cartes inheritors but in Holland that same period was the age of Spinoza and Bale and in England it was the time of Hobbes and Locke the seed was sprouting des cartes work had some influence on French literature and art his style was a refreshing innovation here was philosophy in the vernacular dangerously open to all and seldom at a philosopher spoken with such charming intimacy recounting the adventures of reason as vividly as farce ah recounting an exploit in chivalry that brief and digestible discord ulema toad was not only a masterpiece of French prose it set the tone both in its language and in its ideas for the classic age in France for order intelligence and moderation in letters and arts in manners and speech its emphasis on clear and distinct ideas suited the gallic mind its exaltation of reason became in wallow the first principle of the classic style ma dong Clara song could toujours vazhi Cree on print dev SIL Lulu straw allure pre love reason then let your writings ever derive from it alone their luster and their worth for two centuries the French drama became the rhetoric of reason competing with the turbulence of passion perhaps French poetry suffered from Descartes his mood and his mechanisms left small scope for imagination or feeling after him the ebullient chaos of Rabelais the formless meandering of Montaigne even the violent disorders of the religious wars gave way to the rational arguments of kornei the rigid unities of Racine the logical piety of busway the law and order form and manners of the monarchy in the court under louis xiv unwittingly descartes had shared in inaugurating a new style in french life as well as in philosophy his influence in philosophy was probably greater than that of any other modern thinker before Kant mal branch stemmed from him Spinoza schooled himself in the Cartesian logic and found its weaknesses in expounding it he imitated the d score and his autobiographical fragment on the improvement of the understanding he adopted the geometrical ideal of philosophy in his ethics he based his discussion of Human Bondage on de cartes traité de pasión the idealistic tradition and modern philosophy from Berkeley to Fichte started with the Cartesian emphasis on thought as the only reality directly known just as the empirical tradition flowed from Hobbes dispenser but they card offered an antidote to idealism the conception of an objective world completely mechanical his attempt to understand organic as well as inorganic operations in mechanical terms gave a reckless but fruitful impetus to biology and physiology and his mechanical analysis of sensation imagination memory and volition became a major source of modern psychology after the 17th century in France at buttress Dorothy doxy with Descartes the enlightenment of the 18th century found rich roots in his methodical doubt his trust in reason his interpretation of all animal life in the same terms as physics and chemistry all the upholding pride of the expatriated frenchman justified itself in his proliferating influence upon the mind of france the great debate between reason and faith was taking conscious form but its modern history had only begun looking back over those 90 years from 1558 to 1603 sh leo from Shakespeare to Descartes we perceived that the absorbing issues were still within the confines of Christianity between competing varieties of religious faith based upon a Bible that all accepted as the Word of God only in stray voices was there a suggestion that Christianity itself might be put on trial and that philosophy might soon reject all forms of supernatural belief after these first steps in the conflict Catholicism remained supreme in Spain and Portugal where the Inquisition still spread its terror and Paul in Italy the old religion had taken a humane err form beautifying life with art and anointing mortality with hope France compromised Christianity survived vigorous and fruitful among the people Catholic or Huguenots while the upper classes frolicked with doubt postponing piety to the eve of death the Netherlands made each geographical compromise the southern provinces kept Catholicism while Calvinism triumphed in the north in Germany Protestantism was saved by a French Cardinal but Bavaria and Austria were confirmed in their former allegiance while Hungary and Bohemia were recaptured for the papacy in Scandinavia Protestantism became the law of the land but the queen of Sweden preferred the ceremonies of Rome in England Elizabeth proposed a gracious union of Roman ritual with national liberty but English Protestantism dividing into a swarm of sects displayed its vitality and risked its life amid this clash of armies and creeds the international of science was laboring to lessen superstition and fear it was inventing or improving the microscope the telescope the thermometer and the barometer it was devising the logarithmic and decimal systems reforming the calendar and developing analytical geometry it was already dreaming of reducing all reality to an algebraic equation to Cobra had made the patiently repeated observations that enabled Kepler to formulate those laws of planetary motion which were to illuminate Newton's vision of one universal law Galileo was revealing new and vaster worlds through his ever larger telescopes and was traumatizing the conflict of science and theology in the halls of the Inquisition in philosophy Giordano Bruno was letting himself be burned to death in the attempt to reconsider T in the cosmos in terms worthy of Copernicus Francis Bacon summoning the Wits to science was mapping its tasks for centuries to come and Descartes with his universal doubt was giving another cue to the age of reason morals and manners were molded by the vicissitudes of belief literature itself was touched by the conflict and the ideas of philosophers echoed in the poetry of Marlowe Shakespeare and done soon all the wars and revolutions of the rival states would sink into minor significance compared with that mounting spreading contest between faith and reason which was to agitate and transform the mind of Europe perhaps of the world
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Channel: Rocky C
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Keywords: Will Durant, René Descartes, Philosophy
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Length: 37min 10sec (2230 seconds)
Published: Sat Nov 25 2017
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