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Discuss the Extent to Which Descartes Has Overcome His Doubts of the F

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Discuss the extent to which Descartes has overcome his doubts of the first Meditations

In Descartes' meditations, Descartes begins what Bernard Williams has called the project of Ð''pure enquiry' to discover an indubitable premise or foundation to base his knowledge on, by subjecting everything to a kind of scepticism now known as Cartesian doubt. This is known as foundationalism, where a philosopher basis all epistemological knowledge on an indubitable premise.

Within meditation one Descartes subjects all of his beliefs regarding sensory data and even existence to the strongest and most hyperbolic of doubts. He invokes the notion of the all powerful, malign demon who could be deceiving him regarding sensory experience and even his understanding of the simplest mathematical and logical truths in order to attain an indubitable premise that is epistemologically formidable. In meditation one Descartes has three areas of doubt, doubt of his own existence, doubt of the existence of God, and doubt of the existence of the external world. Descartes' knowledge of these three areas are subjected to three types of scepticism the first where he believes that his senses are being deceived Ð''these senses played me false, and it is prudent never to trust entirely those who have once deceived us'. The second of the forms of scepticism revolves around whether Descartes is dreaming or not Ð''I see so clearly that there are no conclusive signs by means of which one can distinguish between being awake and being asleep'. The aforementioned malign demon was Descartes third method of doubt as he realised God would not deceive him.

Descartes' search for an underlying foundational premise ends when he realises he exists, at least when he thinks he exists Ð''doubtless, then, that I exist and, let him deceive me as he may, he can never bring it about that I am nothing, so long as I shall be conscious that I am something. So that it must, in fine, be maintained, all things being maturely and carefully considered, that this proposition I am, I exist, is necessarily true each time it is expressed by me or conceived in my mind'. This argument Ð''I think therefore I am' is Descartes' cogito argument as in Latin it is cogito ergo sum. The cogito argument raises some difficulties, as when thinking results in existence not thinking should therefore result in non-existence leaving the problem of returning to thought from non-existence. Descartes could however reply that the term thought includes the conceiving and perception of all sensory input which is constant, resulting with a human being who thinks non-stop from birth till death removing the problem of dropping out of existence periodically. Human beings are capable of simultaneous thought, this is best illustrated when a person is dreaming as the person will be receiving sensory data from both the external world and from the dream therefore the human is thinking on more than one level at a time which could result in there being two existence's. A further Cartesian response could be that the level of thought or the amount of thought is irrelevant, all that is important is that the thought is being generated by the one individual, therefore it is the one individual that exists. It is seemingly impossible to criticise the cogito argument as every time it is presented to our mind we are forced to assent to it, it may be the case that this argument is infallible or at least indubitable, Descartes therefore has convincingly overcome his doubt of his own existence.

Now that Descartes realised that he was a thinking being he focused his efforts on trying to prove the existence of God for this Descartes has two arguments based on a priori reasoning, the Ontological argument and the Trademark argument.

Descartes first argument for the existence of God is known as the Trademark argument. The argument states that we all have the idea of God in our head (Ð''Ð'...there is a real and positive idea of God or of a Being of supreme perfection to my mindÐ'...') as we are not able to create the idea of a perfect Being this idea must have been planted inside us by God, as a designer leaves a trademark. This argument is substantiated by:

Ð''In considering this more attentively, it occurs to me in the first place that I should not be astonished if my intelligence is not capable of comprehending why God acts as He does; and that there is thus no reason to doubt of His existence from the fact that I may perhaps find many other things besides this as to which I am able to understand neither for what reason nor how God has produced them. For, in the first place, knowing that my nature is extremely feeble and limited, and that the nature of God is on the contrary immense, incomprehensible, and infinite, I have no further difficulty in recognising that there is an infinitude of matters in His power, the causes of which transcend my knowledge; and this reason suffices to convince me that the species of cause termed final, finds no useful employment in physical (or natural) things; for it does not appear to me that I can without temerity seek to investigate the (inscrutable) ends of God.'

The trademark argument has been subjected to criticism, John Cottingham's criticism was that he does not have the idea of God in his head therefore God does not exist. Descartes could, however, respond that everyone has the idea of God within them including John Cottingham whether they agree with it or not.

A further criticism is similar to the substitution criticism of the ontological argument, it is possible to have the idea of a perfect pizza within one's mind and as it is impossible to conceive of perfection within the limits of reason it must have been placed there by the perfect pizza maker. Descartes could reply that this argument could only work for God as God has Ð''every sort of perfection' whereas a perfect pizza would not.

William of Ockham, who was responsible for Ockham's razor, could have used this argument against the trademark argument. Ockham's razor states that the simplest form of statement is superior to endless hypotheses Ð''It is vain to do with more what can be done with fewer' the ontological argument would be simpler if Descartes stated that we all have the idea of a God that exists in our head.

Descartes' trademark argument does not prove God's existence to a satisfactory degree; therefore, Descartes revised Anselm's medieval ontological argument to attempt to further prove God's existence.

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