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Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy

Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy. Week 9: Descartes and the Subject. Augustine and Self-Consciousness: Summary. According to Augustine, both our senses and our understanding and reason play a role in what we know.

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Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy

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  1. Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy Week 9: Descartes and the Subject

  2. Augustine and Self-Consciousness: Summary • According to Augustine, both our senses and our understanding and reason play a role in what we know. • Because we have an inner sense that puts everything together, we may be conscious of ourselves or self-conscious. • The idea of self-consciousness is the idea of subjectivity. We can distinguish the subjectivity of our sensations, opinions, feelings, and perceptions from the objectivity of what exists for all of us and can be known through reasons or reasoning.

  3. Augustine and subjectivity • To help define the nature of the self, Augustine distinguishes between things that are subjective (or dependent on the self-conscious subject) and those that are objective (or independent of the self-conscious subject). • Our problem (and Descartes’ problem): What is the relationship between the subjective and the objective?

  4. Subjectivity and Objectivity • “By ‘our own’ and ‘personal,’ I mean that which each one of us consumes for himself and what each alone perceives in himself as belonging properly to his own nature. By ‘common’ and, as it were, ‘public,’ I mean what is perceived by everyone who perceives, without its being changed or destroyed.” (p. 53).

  5. Subjective: Sensations and Impressions Opinions Pains and feelings Experiences Memories Value judgments Objective: Trees Houses Bodies Things located in space outside me Numbers Shapes Colors Subjective and Objective

  6. Rene Descartes • 1596-1650 • Born in France, travels as a young man to Holland and Germany to serve in the army • In 1618, has a series of dreams that he interprets as telling him he will found a new science

  7. Descartes and the Copernican Revolution • In 1543, Copernicus proposed that the motion of the planets could be explained by placing the sun at the center of the solar system • His ideas were developed by Galileo Galilei, who lived at almost the same time as Descartes

  8. Descartes and Subjectivity • Building on ideas already suggested by St. Augustine, Descartes will make the subject and the experiences it has the center of the new science and a whole new way of thinking of knowledge, reason, and the world. • He does so by testing what he knows to find out what is truly reliable and what is not.

  9. Descartes and Subjectivity: Knowledge and Foundations • “Several years have now passed since I first realized how numerous were the false opinions that in my youth I had taken to be true, and thus how doubtful were all those that I had subsequently built upon them. And thus I realized that once in my life I had to raze everything to the ground and begin again from the original foundations.” (17)

  10. Descartes and Meditation • Descartes undertakes to test all of his opinions to see if they are really knowledge. To do so, he will ask himself if they are based on a secure foundation: that is, whether they are certain and immune to doubt. • He considers various possibilities of doubt or skeptical scenarios to see whether he really knows what he thinks he knows

  11. Descartes: Radical Doubt • Descartes considers three skeptical scenarios or possibilities of radical doubt: • 1) Senses can be deceptive, for instance when I mistake something far away • 2) I could be dreaming • 3) God, or an “evil genius,” could be deceiving me by “feeding in” my thoughts and experiences

  12. The Brain in a Vat(a modern version of skepticism) • If we are brains in vats, we may think we are having experiences such as being outside, walking in the sun, feeling the warmth on our faces, etc. • But we are really just brains wired up to electrical stimulators, perhaps controlled by a computer

  13. Philosophy: The Matrix • NEO: This isn’t real? • MORPHEUS: What is real? How do you define ‘real’? If you're talking about your senses, what you feel, taste, smell, or see, then all you're talking about are electrical signals interpreted by your brain.

  14. How do we know that we are not dreaming? • How do we know that we are not being deceived by an evil genius more powerful than ourselves? • How do we know that we are not brains in vats? • IF any of these SKEPTICAL SCENARIOS are TRUE, then what (if anything) might we STILL know and hold on to?

  15. Descartes and subjectivity: Re-building knowledge • If any of the skeptical scenarios holds true, then we apparently do not know of the existence of anything outside us. We do not know whether the things that we seem to see actually exist or even that we exist as the beings we seem to be. • Is there, nevertheless, anything that we can still be certain of?

  16. Descartes and Subjectivity: Re-building Knowledge • “…I have persuaded myself that there is absolutely nothing in the world: no sky, no earth, no minds, no bodies. Is it then the case that I too do not exist? But doubtless I did exist, if I persuaded myself of something … Thus, after everything has been most closely weighed, it must finally be admitted that this pronouncement ‘I am, I exist’ is necessarily true every time I utter it or conceive it in my mind…” (25)

  17. Descartes and Subjectivity: Re-building knowledge • Having undertaken to doubt everything he can, Descartes finds that he cannot doubt that he exists as a thinking thing: • “Here I make my discovery: thought exists; it alone cannot be separated from me. I am; I exist – this is certain…At this time I admit nothing that is not necessarily true… I am therefore precisely nothing but a thinking thing: that is, a mind, or intellect, or understanding, or reason…” (27)

  18. Descartes and Subjectivity: Re-building knowledge • By the end of the Second Meditation, Descartes has discovered that he exists as a thinking thing or a subject: • “But what then am I? A thing that thinks. What is that? A thing that doubts, understands, affirms, denies, wills, refuses, and that also imagines and senses.” (28)

  19. Descartes and Subjectivity: Re-building knowledge • By the end of the second Meditation, Descartes still does not know of the existence of any object outside himself. Yet he does know: • That he exists as a thinking thing; and • That his actual processes of thinking, imagining, seeming to see and seeming to perceive actually exist as well.

  20. “Seemings:” The Way of Ideas • “…For although perhaps, as I supposed before, absolutely nothing that I imagined is true, still the very power of imagining really does exist, and constitutes a part of my thought. Finally, it is this same ‘I’ who senses or is cognizant of bodily things as if through the senses. For example, I now see a light, I hear a noise, I feel heat. These things are false, since I am asleep. Yet I certainly do seem to see, hear, and feel warmth. This cannot be false. Properly speaking, this is what in me is called ‘sensing.’ But this, precisely so taken, is nothing other than thinking.” (p. 29)

  21. Descartes and Subjectivity: The Way Of Ideas • At this stage, Descartes does not know whether anything outside him exists, but he knows that he himself and his own processes of thinking do exist • These processes of thinking – the way things seem – can be called “ideas.” For instance, Descartes does not know that the sun really exists, but he does know at least that his idea or impression of the sun does.

  22. Descartes and Subjectivity: Summary • Trying to test all his beliefs for reliability, Descartes considers three skeptical scenarios according to which much or all of what he believes could be false. If anything survives these scenarios, it will be true and certain no matter what. • He discovers that even if the skeptical scenarios hold, still he exists as a thinking thing or subject that can think, doubt, reason, and have experiences. • Even if nothing in the external world is known for sure, this thinking thing or subject can be known to exist, with absolute certainty, together with all its processes of thinking, imagining, reasoning, and so forth. Even if we do not know whether any things in the external world actually exist, still we can know for certain that our own representations or ideas of them do.

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