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PHL105Y November 9, 2005

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Title: PHL105Y November 9, 2005


1
PHL105YNovember 9, 2005
  • For Monday, finish Descartes Sixth Meditation,
    and read Section I (pp.1-9) of Humes Enquiry
    Concerning Human Understanding
  • For Friday, write a page on one of the following
    questions (it will be collected).
  • On p.53, Descartes comments that the soul is not
    just in the body in the way a sailor is in a
    ship, but is commingled with it. What does he
    mean by that?
  • In the last paragraph of the Sixth Meditation,
    Descartes explains how we tell the difference
    between dreaming and waking life. How
    satisfactory do you find Descartes account of
    how we do this?

2
The first essay, final version
  • The final version of your first essay is due
    today. Any late essays should be given to your
    instructor or TA in person, or put in the
    philosophy drop box in the stairwell outside
    NB262.
  • Essays get downgraded 2 points for every school
    day late, unless you supply a documented excuse
    such as a doctors note
  • Upload your essay to turnitin.com when it is
    finished instructions on doing this are
    available on the course website. We count your
    essay as received when it is uploaded, but you
    need to hand in a hard copy too.
  • Class ID 1395973
  • Class password republic all lower-case

3
The Fourth Meditation
  • God and the problem of error

4
If my rationality is reliable,why do I make
mistakes?
  • Three claims Descartes is committed to
  • God does not deceive me
  • My faculty of judgment comes from God
  • I do make mistakes sometimes

5
An analysis of judgment
  • Judgments always involve the joint work of
  • The intellect, through which I perceive ideas
  • The will, which affirms or denies (or suspends
    judgment upon) what I perceive

6
An analysis of judgment
  • The intellect, taken on its own, is not the
    source of error (why not?)
  • -the intellect just presents ideas whether you
    contemplate an idea of yourself, a table, or the
    tooth fairy, you havent made an error until you
    judge it, until you say The tooth fairy exists.

7
An analysis of judgment
  • The will, taken on its own, is not defective (why
    not?)
  • It is just the power to affirm or deny any
    particular idea its an unlimited power for me
    I am always free to decide what to think
  • (what is freedom?)

8
What is freedom?
  • In order to be free I need not be capable of
    being moved in each direction on the contrary,
    the more I am inclined in one direction the
    more freely do I choose that direction.
  • AT57-8.

9
What is freedom?
  • In order to be free I need not be capable of
    being moved in each direction on the contrary,
    the more I am inclined in one direction the
    more freely do I choose that direction.
  • AT57-8.
  • What matters is that no external force
    determines your decision

10
Freedom is not indifference
  • Were I always to see clearly what is true and
    good, I would never deliberate about what is to
    be judged or chosen. In that event although I
    would be entirely free, I could never be
    indifferent. (AT58, p.39)

11
Where errors come from
  • Not from the intellect, on its own, nor from the
    will, on its own, but from my failure to align
    them properly
  • The intellect is fine as far as it goes, but it
    doesnt present me with a clear and distinct idea
    of everything (its finite)
  • Errors arise when I make judgments about things
    that are not clear and distinct

12
Whos to blame?
  • If I want to, I can avoid error entirely, all my
    life, by only judging what is clear and distinct
    to me
  • Note that God could have given me a clear and
    distinct idea about everything Id ever think
    about. Since he didnt, is he to blame for my
    mistakes?

13
Error and God
  • God could have made me free, finite, and
    infallible
  • He didnt do so, but hes not responsible for my
    mistakes (why not?)

14
Error and God
  • God could have made me free, finite, and
    infallible
  • He didnt do so, but hes not responsible for my
    mistakes (why not?)
  • Inescapable (built-in) human error would be a
    problem avoidable human error is not (why?)

15
The avoidance of error
  • We can avoid error entirely by taking care to
    remember to abstain from making judgments
    whenever the truth of a given matter is not
    apparent. (AT 62, p.41)
  • How helpful is that rule?
  • What does it presuppose about us?

16
The Fifth Meditation
  • Another proof of the existence of God
  • Q What aspect of my ideas of material things is
    clear and distinct?
  • A Their mathematical properties (so Im
    entitled to use math to gain knowledge of
    nature).

17
The Sixth Meditation
  • The existence of material things
  • The distinction between
  • mind and body

18
What we know at the beginning of the Sixth
Meditation
  • I exist
  • God exists, and is not a deceiver
  • Our clear and distinct ideas are true
  • The aspect of our ideas of corporeal things that
    is clear and distinct their mathematical
    properties (recall the discussion of the wax in
    the Second)

19
What we know at the beginning of the Sixth
Meditation
  • I exist
  • God exists, and is not a deceiver
  • The aspect of my ideas of material things that is
    clear and distinct their mathematical
    properties (so Im going to use math to gain
    knowledge of nature)
  • What I dont yet know whether this table (or any
    other corporeal thing) exists

20
How do I prove the table is real?
  • Is there a part of my mind that is designed to
    pick up on the reality of the table?

21
How do I prove the table is real?
  • Is there a part of my mind that is designed to
    pick up on the reality of the table?
  • My imagination and my pure intellect are distinct
  • Caution recall that in the 4th Descartes
    described the intellect as whatever presented
    content for affirmation, and that content could
    include visualizations or intellectual ideas?
    There he was talking about the whole faculty of
    the intellect, which includes imagination there
    is also the pure intellect, which doesnt
    visualize, but just does mathematical reasoning,
    and is contrasted to imagination.

22
Why do I imagine?
  • Note remember that imagining includes fantasy,
    sense perception, memory any mode of thought in
    which you contemplate images
  • Is imagination essential to me being me?

23
Why do I imagine?
  • Is it essential to me being me?
  • No I could exist without it.

24
Why do I imagine?
  • Is it essential to me being me?
  • No I could exist without it.
  • So why is it there? Is it essential to my
    picking up signals from the world around me?

25
Why do I imagine?
  • Is it essential to me being me?
  • No I could exist without it.
  • So why is it there? Is it essential to my
    picking up signals from the world around me?
  • Yes, so the fact that a non-deceiving God gave
    this faculty means that theres something out
    there.

26
Descartes proof of the existence of corporeal
things
  • The ideas of the imagination dont all come from
    me (they strike me against my will, sometimes)
  • These ideas either come from God, directly or
    indirectly, or from other things
  • God has ..given me a great inclination to
    believe that these ideas issue from corporeal
    things (AT80)
  • consequently corporeal things exist. (AT80)

27
What about illusions, etc.?
  • The teachings of nature make me believe in outer
    things (i.e. its instinctive, not intellectual
    like thirst or hunger)
  • These feelings suggest to me that I am a union of
    soul and body (see AT 81)
  • The primary purpose of sense perception is
    keeping body and soul together i.e. survival,
    not insight into the true nature of things

28
Imagination and survival
  • Only those things that are clear and distinct to
    me are really as I perceive them bodies may not
    exactly match my obscure perceptions of them
  • I perceive things in a way that assists the
    survival of the ordinary person in ordinary
    circumstances my perceptions might sometimes be
    misleading in dim light/at high speed/ etc.
  • Illusions can happen, but they cant happen
    constantly, and I discover I am able to offset
    them and figure out how things really are

29
Mind and body
  • The mind is indivisible extended things can be
    divided into parts
  • Because the body sends signals along an extended
    pathway into a single point where it contacts the
    mind, its signals can be misleading (an impulse
    from your toe travels along pathway ABCD to reach
    your brain if your foot is amputated at point C
    you could have the same sensation of the hurt
    toe, misleadingly)

30
Mind and body
  • But the reason why phantom limb pain and other
    true errors of nature are possible is that God
    has set up the best overall system for our normal
    condition so there is no malice behind these
    errors furthermore, we can find out enough
    about ourselves to override these errors

31
Self-understanding
  • An analysis of the purpose of my faculties (like
    the one Ive just undertaken in going through the
    Meditations) enables me to recognize the errors
    Im vulnerable to, and correct or avoid them
    without difficulty
  • Furthermore, when I bring all the senses, and
    memory, and intellect to bear on a situation, I
    can find out the truth

32
Doubts about dreaming resolved
  • How can we distinguish dreaming from waking life?
  • I now notice that there is a considerable
    difference between these two dreams are never
    joined by the memory with all the other actions
    of life, as is the case with those actions that
    occur when one is awake. For surely if, while I
    am awake, someone were suddenly to appear to me
    and then immediately disappear, as occurs in
    dreams, so that I see neither where he came from
    nor where he went, it is not without reason that
    I would judge him to be a ghost or a phantom
    conjured up in my brain, rather than a true man.
    (AT89-90)
  • Is this satisfactory?

33
Doubts about dreaming resolved
  • when these things happen, and I notice
    distinctly where they come from, where they are
    now, and when they come to me, and when I connect
    my perception of them without interruption to the
    rest of my life, I am clearly certain that these
    perceptions have happened to me not while I was
    dreaming but while I was awake.
  • What does it mean to connect your perceptions
    this way?

34
Doubts dispelled
  • Nor ought I have even the least doubt about the
    truth of these things, if, having mustered all
    the senses, in addition to the memory and my
    intellect, in order to examine them, nothing is
    passed on to me by any of these sources that
    conflicts with the others. For from the fact
    that God is no deceiver, it follows that I am in
    no way mistaken in these matters. (AT90)

35
Doubts dispelled?
  • But because the need to get things done does not
    always permit us the leisure for such a careful
    inquiry, we must confess that the life of man is
    apt to commit errors regarding particular things,
    and we must acknowledge the infirmity of our
    nature. (AT90)
  • How great is this infirmity? Does this
    acknowledgement undercut Descartes project of
    establishing something firm and lasting in the
    sciences?
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