Meditations on First Philosophy: Descartes
By: Monika • Essay • 920 Words • November 21, 2009 • 1,367 Views
Essay title: Meditations on First Philosophy: Descartes
Meditations on First Philosophy
By Rene Descartes
In Meditation One Descartes doubts the existence of external objects because he has come to realize that many of the things he believed to be true in his youth are in fact false opinions. He doubts the existence of objects because he has used his false opinions as foundations for everything else in life that he perceives to be true. He searches for certainty by doubting the foundations of his beliefs and by freeing his mind of all cares and prejudices. Descartes doubts the existence of external objects in the following manner: sense misperception, dream hypothesis and the evil genius.
Descartes states that he had perceived objects to be of truth because of his senses. External objects are available to one's senses and therefore they make us perceive things for what they are not. As a result our senses deceive us, and Descartes shows us through this meditation that we have no way of knowing external objects are real because our senses are not reliable. Therefore if you deny external objects and their existence on the grounds of misperception of your senses, then in turn you are denying your own body. Because our senses are illusory we then have no way of knowing whether or not we are awake or hallucinating. If we can dream anything we can perceive, then you have no way of knowing that you are not dreaming at any given moment. Therefore you can assume you are always dreaming, in which case the objects you perceive to be in space and external are actually objects in your mental state of consciousness. Consequently those objects perceived as external are in fact a state in your mind and become internal objects.
Descartes states in this first meditation that he has been deceived all this time, and he believes that being mistaken and mislead are imperfections. Therefore he explains that the source of truth is not a supremely good God, but a powerful evil genius that has put all effort into tricking us. He explains that we perceive objects because they are planted in our minds by this mastermind, who makes us believe that these ideas are caused by external objects outside of our mind. Descartes states that he regards all external things as bedeviling games of his dreams, and that this evil genius is testing his credulity. What remains certain at the end of the first meditation is that we do not have the power to know what is true, and that the ideas we perceive are mere illusions in our dreams.
The Ontological Argument
The Ontological Argument tries to prove the existence of God by using the idea or concept of God. In St. Anselm's argument he supposes that God is conceived as most perfect and a being that which none greater can be thought. He discusses how a "fool" can understand the concept of God as the greatest being yet still doubt his existence. If one understands God as the greatest being then they are accepting the concept and definition of God, so it would be contradictory to deny his existence. If he exists in one's understanding then he cannot be thought of as nonexistent. If he is truly a being than which a greater cannot be thought then he cannot be thought of as nonexistent, because he then would not be the most