1 / 9

PHILOSOPHY 1204 – KNOWLEDGE AND REALITY

PHILOSOPHY 1204 – KNOWLEDGE AND REALITY. Dr. Stephanie Semler Virginia Tech. Rene Descartes (1596 – 1650). Widely regarded as the father of modern philosophy Made major contributions to mathematics and medicine and physics Major Works in Philosophy Discourse on Method

telma
Télécharger la présentation

PHILOSOPHY 1204 – KNOWLEDGE AND REALITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PHILOSOPHY 1204 – KNOWLEDGE AND REALITY Dr. Stephanie Semler Virginia Tech

  2. Rene Descartes (1596 – 1650) • Widely regarded as the father of modern philosophy • Made major contributions to mathematics and medicine and physics • Major Works in Philosophy • Discourse on Method • Meditations on First Philosophy • Principles of Philosophy • The Passions of the Soul

  3. Descartes’ Meditations • Overall Structure: • Meditation I: Descartes sets out to doubt all his beliefs through the method of doubt, starts with his perceptual beliefs • Meditation II: Continuation of the method of doubt, now on rational beliefs, arrives at the Cogito • Meditation III: Argues for the existence of God as foundation of knowledge • Meditation IV: Explanation of errors made by us • Meditation V: Survey of what can be known by us • Meditation VI: Argument for the distinction between the mind and the body, and for the existence of the external world

  4. Background to Meditations • Descartes responds to two philosophical forces: • Aristotelian Scholasticism, most importantly, the conflicting conclusions arrived at by Aristotelian physics. • Renaissance Skepticism, specifically claims by Chandoux that science can only rest on probabilities. • Descartes seeks to put science, and so all knowledge on a foundation of certain truths.

  5. How to Find Certain Truths • The Method of Doubt • Treat  all beliefs that are not absolutely certain as if  they were false. • Try to determine if there is anything that can be known with absolute certainty, any belief that is immune to doubt. • You don’t need to go through all your beliefs one by one to see if they can be doubted.  • You can show a belief is doubtful if you can show that its source is unreliable! • What are the sources of our beliefs?

  6. The Argument for Universal Doubt • Argument occurs in two phases • The Dream Argument (Mediation I) • Which source • The Deceiving God Argument (Meditation II) • Conclusion of the Dream Argument?

  7. The Dream Argument • When we dream, we often have experiences indistinguishable from ordinary sense experience. • The objects of dreamed sense experience are not real objects – dream experience deceives us. • If the senses deceive us in dreams, they can deceive us at any time. • Therefore, all the beliefs based on sense perception are susceptible to doubt (and so much be considered to be patently false on the method of doubt).

  8. A priori and A posteriori Beliefs  • A posteriori knowledge is based on  beliefs whose source is the senses. • A priori knowledge is based on beliefs that are not justified on the basis of sense experience. • What beliefs seem to survive the Dream Argument?

  9. In Class Question • Consider the Dream Argument – is there any counterexample that you can think of? How could we ever be certain that we are not really dreaming right now?

More Related