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Descartes 's Meditations On First Philosophy

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In the third part of his Meditations on First Philosophy, Descartes makes an argument for mentally proving the existence of God. Having previously established the he exists and thinking thing, he then uses his method of clear and distinct perception, combined with a number of additional ideas he introduces in the chapter, to make his case. He produces an argument with some merit in its reasoning, though it is still able to be critiqued. Descartes engages in an effort to use what he attained in discerning his own existence and status as a thinking thing and continue on to a proof of god’s existence. From reflecting on how he came to consider himself as existing and being a thinking being, he extracts from it the notion that he understood them because he had clearly and distinctly perceived them. Thus he established the notion that whatever he clearly and distinctly perceives must be true. Though to figure the manner of what is true, he turns to discerning types of thoughts. He established three apparent categories of ideas: innate, adventitious, and self-produced. He focuses on considering adventitious ideas (those ideas he regards as coming from something external to him). In thinking of these, he figures that it does his thinking of such things do not necessarily make them actually external or that they have been clearly and distinctly perceived. Descartes thus moves to a consideration of the reality of such matters. In his effort, he makes the distinction of formal

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