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Analysis Of Descartes 's ' The Six Meditations '

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Through the six Meditations, Descartes comes to the conclusion that memories and dreams are deceptive and are not to be trusted. He discusses the existence of material objects, God, and himself. God exists and allows deception and Descartes’ ability to recognize that everything is false proves that he exists as well. He explains the difference between imagination and intellect, as well as the idea that the senses are deceptive and that knowledge comes from the mind and reason. Descartes’ belief in God allows him to solidify his own existence, as well as the existence of material objects. Descartes, in the First Meditation, uses his belief that reality and the senses are deceptive to prove that he undoubtedly exists. He explains this notion by discussing sleep and dreams: “How often has it happened to me that in the night I dreamt that I found myself in this particular place, that I was dressed and seated near the fire, whilst in reality I was lying undressed in bed!” (Meditations, 7) When dreaming, he truly believes that he is sitting by the fire and looking at the paper in his lap. In reality, he is asleep in bed. This is what he means by saying that “it is sometimes proved to me that these senses are deceptive, and it is wiser not to trust entirely to anything by which we have once been deceived.” (Meditations, 7) What he sees in dreams often tricks him into believing that he is sensing real objects.
Descarte then states that simple things (arithmetic and geometry)

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