Descartes On Metaphysics
Descartes’ Meditations is a discussion of metaphysics, or what is really
real.
In these writings, he ultimately hopes to achieve absolute
certainty about the
nature of everything including God, the physical world,
and himself. It is only
with a clear and distinct knowledge of such things
that he can then begin
understand his true reality. In order to acquire
absolutely certainty, Descartes
must first lay a complete foundation of
integrity on which to build up his
knowledge. The technique he uses to lay
this base is doubt. If any belief can be
doubted it is not certain, therefore
making unusable as a foundation. Descartes
starts by looking at our usual
sources for truth. Authority, which is churches,
parents, and schools, he
says, are not reliable sources for truth because time
shows we all die, and
that we are eventually proved wrong, much in the same way
the accepted truths
of science have changed dramatically over the course of
history. Also, he
considers the generally excepted view that our senses
dependably report the
absolute nature of reality. Like authority though,
Descartes discards the
senses as a source of truth because of the ‘Dream
Argument’ or the belief
that based on the senses there is no definite way of
proving that you are
dreaming or that you are awake. Therefore it is possible
that everything we
believe is false, making the senses an unreliable source.
Upon
establishing this, Descartes doubts the existence of a physical or
external
world. Despite that he has an idea of things in the world, he has no
definitive
way of knowing if they exist beyond his own mind. Another
foundation that he
tries to confirm is mathematics. But he soon realizes
math’s truth isn’t
completely reliable because of the ‘Demon Hypothesis’,
which acknowledges
the possibility of an all powerful, malicious being that
is deceiving him about
everything, including mathematics. As a result,
Descartes ponders the
possibility that he has no way of being completely
positive about anything, even
is existence. It is only after some
deliberation that he comes to the conclusion
that it is impossible to be
incorrect about everything because he has doubt, and
to posses doubt, there
must be a doubter. Hence, he doubts, therefore he exists.
With the
assurance of his existence, he is presented with the deeper question of
what
he, himself actually is. Descartes knows that he is not just a body based
on
his doubt of the senses. Despite the fact that he feels he’s not a body,
he
does believe he has properties, such as doubt, that make him a substance.
From
this he concludes that his is an immaterial substance and that his
essential
property is self-consciousness because you can have no real proof
of yourself
except through your own thoughts or consciousness. Descartes
articulates this
belief in the statement, "I’m aware that I’m aware."
Furthering this
with the belief that the essential property of existence
itself is
self-consciousness. Accordingly, he has established the first
absolutely certain
foundation of truth that he was seeking. Although he
cannot yet be sure of the
existence of anything external to or outside of his
mind, the certainty of his
own thoughts cannot be doubted. This leads us to
wonder about the relationship
between the immaterial mind and material body,
commonly known in philosophy as
the mind/body problem. Descartes takes the
stance of a strong dualist or someone
who believes that the mind and the body
are not only separate, but competent of
independent existence. Other
positions are that of the weak dualist, who feels
that while the mind and
body are metaphysically distinct, they cannot exist
independently of one
another, and that of the materialist who deem that only
physical things and
physical procedures exist, while the mind does not. Beliefs
of this nature
are brought up in relation to Descartes’ question of what makes
a thing
particularly itself through time and change. For him, it is the
mind/soul
that exists through time and change. Hoping to discern the existence
of
anything else aside from himself, an immaterial substance,
Descartes
considers a variety of ideas he has within his mind and
contemplates whether he
could have conceived them himself or not.
Predominantly he finds that he has the
idea of a perfect being. And upon
further consideration, he feels that he could
not have been the cause of this
thought because it is impossible for an
imperfect being to be the cause of
the idea of a perfect being. Descartes is
imperfect in that he is not all
knowing (omniscient) or all powerful
(omnipotent), and is most certainly
mortal. Based on this ‘Causal’ proof he
says, " I have the idea of a perfect
being, and that idea has to have a cause,
and since I am imperfect, the idea
has to have be originated from a perfect
source or God." Another way in which
Descartes proves the existence of God is
through an ‘Ontological’ proof. This
states that an essential property of a
perfect being is existence, or that
the idea of a perfect being proves that
there must be one because the
definition of a perfect being must include that it
exists. At this point he
observes that his existence depends upon God, or that
only God exists
necessarily, while everything else exists contingently. With
this in mind,
Descartes deduces that the reliability of mathematics can no
longer be
doubted because God guarantees the truth of all
self-evident
ideas,(self-evident not meaning obvious), but ones that can be
calculated
through mathematical physics. Therefore, Descartes now knows that
a perfect
being exists and that he is not alone. A problem arises from
Descartes new
acceptance of a perfect being in addition to himself that asks
why would a
perfect being create or even have the ability the conceive
imperfect beings such
as humankind. In other words, why didn't God equip
Descartes with an
all-inclusive intellect if that was God’s only option
within his power. This
question is actually part of a much larger area of
debate that is known as the'problem of evil'. This 'problem of evil' stems from
the question of why God or
a perfect being would create a universe or reality
in which evil, or completely
pointless badness, exists. As a solutions to
this Descartes says that God gave
us both perfectly free will and a limited
intellect. Free will can only occur
when an agent is free when committing an
act(A) if and only if at the time of
doing act(A), the agent could have done
otherwise. But for this solution to be
plausible, Descartes says that God has
given us the ability to improve that
intellect, through work and study, hence
it is within our means to better our
intellect considerably, leading to his
assimilation of wisdom and virtue. It
also follows that evil is a product of
a limited intellect, so it is us, not
God, that is responsible for evil
in the world. Another possible solution to the'problem of evil' is the theory
that our world or reality is the most perfect of
all possible worlds,
therefore God cannot intervene without making things worse.
There exists
some reasonable conjecture dealing with these solutions. One is
that many
modern philosophers, scientists, and psychologists accept the view
of
determinism, that which states that all actions have a prior natural,
sufficient
cause, or in terms of people, that human personality is completely
determined by
social conditioning and genetic makeup. Another idea deals with
the notion that
freedom or freewill is not compatible with God's omniscience.
To put it another
way, if God is all knowing, and knows what I will do in the
future, then I must
do what God knows I will do in the future. This means
that I have no choice in
what God knows I will do, since God already knows
that I will do it, therefore
eliminating my freewill. These are some of the
considerations when thinking
about Descartes proof of God's existence. In the
Sixth Meditation, the last
section in our text, Descartes hopes to prove the
existence of the external
world and matter (physical objects located in
space). To do this first he again
acknowledges the existence of minds as an
immaterial substance and God. Next, he
shows that external ideas, or images
of things are neither fashioned by himself
or by God because he has ideas of
things that don't depend on his will. From
this he can say that he will know
matter exists if its image was not a product
of the mind or god. To prove
this attributes the existence of external ideas to
the imagination, which is
the psychological power of receiving and processing
images. Then he says that
thinking is his only essential property which excludes
imagination because
thinking or consciousness doesn't require images. He states
that the only
reason we have an imagination is because we have temporary
physical bodies.
He then concludes that he is not the cause of his external
ideas. To show
that God is not the cause of external ideas or images he first
states that it
is self-evident that external things refer to objects in
space.
Subsequently, if God is causing these ideas, then they are not in
space. But
that would mean that God is deceiving him about a self-evident
idea, which can't
be possible because holding to the truth that God is
perfect, God is incapable
of deception. Consequently, God is not the cause of
these external ideas because
God ensures the truth of self-evident ideas.
To summarize, neither God nor
Descartes is the cause of external ideas,
therefore proving that matter exists.
Now that Descartes has established
the existence of the external world, he hopes
to further his understanding of
its true nature. He finalizes that we can accept
as accurate those parts of
our external ideas, which are self-evident, or those
that can be
mathematically represented. Descartes calls these characteristics
that can be
represented mathematically primary qualities, such as shape,
spacial
location, weight, and height. All those which cannot be deduced
utilizing
mathematics, like color, taste, feel, smell, he refers to as
secondary or
subjective qualities. They cannot be considered accurate
representations of the
external world because they're only particular ways in
which the human body
perceives the world. It is with these preceding ideas
which he accepts the
nature of the external world. The obvious conflict
between science and religion
is another concern that Descartes hopes to
resolve. The reason these two
ideologies seem to be conflicting is because
they both provide competing and
different ideas about the true nature of
reality. Religion offers that the goal
of human life is acquisition of
salvation and eternal life. Conversely, what
science tells us is that the
world is completely deterministic or all just a
course of random evolution.
Descartes feels that the two, mind and matter, are
in completely different
arenas, both of which were created by God. The mind
deals chiefly with
freedom, and personal responsibility, which lies in the field
of religion.
Whereas matter is more connected to science, buts doesn't negate
the
influence of God because God provided us with a system, mathematics,
to
better understand the physical world around us. Thus, if
accurately
comprehended, no conflict should arise between science and
religion. Descartes'
focus in Meditations is absolute certainty. To achieve
this he first must strike
all that he has come to accept as false and only
then start to rebuild is
foundation of knowledge. To insure the integrity of
his newly acquired
understanding of reality, he uses the method of doubt. It
is only through this
method that he can grasp the true nature of reality.
After establishing the
existence of himself, God, and the external world
through this method, Descartes
feels he now possess a clearer picture of
reality.