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Rene Descartes Doubt Analysis

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The Oxford English Dictionary defines doubt as a feeling of uncertainty or lack of conviction. In order to find the reasoning behind God's existence, Descartes doubts until he reaches the certainty of his physical and spiritual existence. Meditation II is all about the exploration of the human mind in order to find certainty and to rid of all sense of doubt. Using a term from the previous meditation known as sensory knowledge, he argues in Meditation II that what he sees does not actually exist, “Therefore I suppose that everything I see is false,” and that his memory is defective (17). The term sensory knowledge can be defined as the means of perceiving the world around you through the human senses. As a result of this argument, he seems to …show more content…

When I said Descartes uses doubt correctly, I mean that he sufficiently explains that one must doubt in order to reach certainty, in other words, one must challenge their senses in order to be certain that the subject is in fact true and physical. I believe that universal doubt is a realistic way to demonstrate that the mind is different in kind than the body, however the body is physical and still in existence, whereas the mind is non-physical but in existence. Descartes uses this logic to doubt his senses in order to come to the conclusion that even though we as smellers, listeners, tasters, touchers, lookers, and of course, thinkers our senses can trick us and therefore cannot be trusted; however we are still physical beings with a non-physical mind in absolute existence on this physical Earth. Going back to Descartes' famous words, he makes the conclusion that he is not only someone who thinks, understands, and recognizes, but is also someone who senses. Descartes uses an argument known as the wax argument to show that our sensory knowledge can be deceiving and it may trick us into just our imagination leading to the conclusion of the non-existence of our

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