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Rene Descartes Meditation 2 Summary

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Throughout the beginning of the meditations René Descartes begins doubting all of his beliefs and opinions. Everything is called into question from the existence of God, the mind and the body, and the essence of material things. Descartes’ approach to philosophical thinking provided a new foundation for the sciences and had a lasting impact on subsequent thinking. Descartes wanted to keep the religion in mind but also wanted to obtain the radical freedom for scientists to explore the objective sciences. Through Descartes’ distinction of the mind from body he is able to prove that science and religion could possibly coincide together. Science would represent the body, and be finite; religion would be represented by the mind and soul and could …show more content…

He describes that “ when I imagine a triangle, I not only understand that it is a figure bounded by three lines, but at the same time I also envisage with the mind’s eye those lines as if they were present; and this is what I call imagining.” (Descartes, 1641). Descartes is implying that through the body and the senses he sees that the triangle has three sides but through the mind he can imagine what it would look like. It then is determined that “this new effort on the part of the mind clearly shows the difference between the imagination and pure intellection.” (Descartes, 1641). The mind and body are not considered to be the same thing, the body is described as natural, finite and divisible, on the contrary the mind is considered to be Infinite and indivisible “Although the entire mind seems to be united to the entire body, nevertheless, were a foot or an arm or any other bodily part to be amputated, I know that nothing has been taken away from the mind on that account.” (Descartes, 1641). Even though the mind and body are not the same thing Descartes describes them as working together “by means of these sensations of pain, hunger, thirst and so on, nature also teaches that I am present not merely to my body in a way a sailor is present in a ship, but that I am most tightly joined and, so to speak, commingled with it, so much so that I and the body constitute one single thing.” (Descartes, 1641) another example of this commingling is “when the nerves in the foot are agitated in a violent and unusual manner, this motion of theirs extends through the marrow of the spine to the inner reaches of the brain, where it gives the mind the sign to sense something, namely, the pain is occurring in the foot. This provokes the mind to do its utmost to move away from the cause of pain, since it

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