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Rene Descartes Meditations On First Philosophy

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Rene Descartes was a French philosopher. Descartes 'Meditations on First Philosophy' was a book that comprised six meditations. Descartes point is to get rid of all belief in things that are not absolutely certain. Descartes purposes of the meditation is to demolish everything and start over to prove things in science that are secure. Skeptical arguments against our common sense beliefs about the world. First, Descartes proposes the argument of illusion. Second, the dream argument. Third, the evil demon argument.
Our mind is the only thing we can be sure of. I only know that my mind exist. Everything we believe in- people, the sun, stars, and where we live is based on your experiences and thoughts. From Descartes' view... all of our beliefs …show more content…

You can be fast asleep in your bed with blankets wrapped around you and in your dreams be in the middle of nowhere and freezing from the cold. When you are asleep, you aren't experiencing things with such clarity as you would when awake. But, there's no way to distinguish between being awake and being asleep. Descartes states, "So it seems reasonable to conclude that physics, astronomy, medicine, and all other sciences dealing with things that have complex structures are doubtful; while arithmetic, geometry and other studies of the simplest and most general things—whether they really exist in nature or not—contain something certain and indubitable. For whether I am awake or asleep, two plus three makes five, and a square has only four sides. It seems impossible to suspect that such obvious truths might be false" (Descartes, Meditation, pg.2) The dream argument isn't as persuasive because it leaves a lot to question about our dreams being an illusion. But, Descartes brings up a great point about perceptions in dreams being like the ones we have while sleeping. Sometimes, I think I'm awake and I was actually dreaming these things. There's also times when I'll be dreaming and aware of what's going on outside of my dream. "But without some possibility of a correct view of things are (either yours or someone else's), the thought that your impressions of the world are not true is meaningless" (Nagel,

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