Descartes Was A Jack Of All Trades, Making Major Contributions
Descartes was a "jack of all trades", making major contributions to the
areas of anatomy, cognitive
science, optics, mathematics and philosophy.
Underlying his methodology is the belief that all science is
based on
mathematics. This is manifested in his unification of ancient geometry and his
new alegbra based
on the Cartesian coodinate system.
For Descartes,
certainty in philosphy and in mathematics is gained through understanding. We
may know
that two apples and two apples makes four apples, but Descartes
believes that matematics transcends the
senses, contributing to an overall
mathematical order to the universe that is independent of senses.
Senses
were at the center of his Meditations on First Philosphy, a work in which
Descartes explores the
concepts of self, God and mind. He begins by shaking
our belief in the sneses; if they are all an illusion
created by a malicious
deceiver, what can we trust? His answer is that we can doubt, and that the
deceiver
cannot cause us to doubt our own existence. Thus, the famous "cogito
ergo sum" (I think therefore I am).
However, the I is not a physical "i",
is is an immaterial mind that is identified by "I".
Thus begins Cartesian
Dualism, the theory that there are two fundamental types of entities : mind
and
matter. The physical bodies exists extended in space, with depth, width
and breadth. However, minds are
entirely immaterial and nonspatial; they are
the "I" he refers to. Since the mind is the only entity that can
think (rocks
cannot), Descartes uses the cogito arguemnt to prove the existence of a
mind.