Descartes: A Biography

(nextflipdebug5) #1

end CUNYB/Clarke     December, :


 Notes to Pages–

.Descartes uses the term ‘essay’ here in the sense of an attempt to write metaphysics
or a sample of his efforts to do so. In the same paragraph, he assured Mersenne
that he was not as deprived of books as might have been thought, since he had a
copy of Aquinas’ ‘Summa[presumably theSumma of Theology]andaBible that I
brought from France’ (ii.).
.Descartes to Mersenne (March) (i.–).
.Descartes explicitly endorses this interpretation in his replies to Burman in April
. ‘There is a summary of theseMeditationsin that section of theDiscourse on
Methodwhich ought to be explained by theMeditationsthemselves’ (v.).
.Forexample, Descartes to Mersenne,March:‘Icannot say how much
weight is required to equal the force of a hammer stroke because that is a factual
question, in which reasoning is useless without the experience’ (iii.–); ‘I cannot
determine the speed with which every heavy body descends initially, because that
is a completely factual question’ (iii.). The same comment appears about the
urine of a mad person (iii.), and about the declination of a magnetic needle
(iii.).
.Silhon (),.
.Ibid.,–.
.Sextus Empiricus (). That this is the principal source of sceptical objections
is acknowledged in Schoock (),–,–;Verbeek (),,, which
is discussed in Chapter.
.De Gournay (). This interpretation of De Gournay has been developed by
Eileen O’Neill.
.‘A nybody can provide as many examples as he pleases of the ways our senses deceive
or cheat us....’; ‘why should we therefore not doubt whether our thinking and
acting are but another dream; our waking, some other species of sleep?’ ‘If this
appearance has once deceived me, if my touchstone regularly proves unreliable
and my scales wrong and out of true, why should I trust them this time, rather
than all the others?’ Montaigne (),,,–.
.Descartes to Mersenne,July(iii.).
.Richeome ().
.Denzinger (), par.; Richeome (),.
.Richeome (),–.
.Ibid.,.
.Ibid.,.
.Ibid.,.Iamusing the word ‘animal’ here as an abbreviation for ‘nonhuman
animal’ and as a translation of the French term‘bˆete’.
.La Mothe le Vayer (),.
.Ibid.,.
.This interpretation is confirmed by Descartes to Mersenne, September,in
which he writes following the publication of theMeditations: ‘In publishing it, I
did what I thought I was obliged to do for the glory of God and the demands of
myconscience’ (iii.). The motto of the Jesuits was then, and still remains: ‘For
the greater glory of God.’
Free download pdf