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Argument and Persuasion in Descartes' Meditations (Paperback)
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Argument and Persuasion in Descartes' Meditations (Paperback)
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Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy has proven to be not
only one of the canonical texts of Western philosophy, but also the
site of a great deal of interpretive activity in scholarship on the
history of early modern philosophy over the last two decades. David
Cunning's monograph proposes a new interpretation, which is that
from beginning to end the reasoning of the Meditations is the
first-person reasoning of a thinker who starts from a confused
non-Cartesian paradigm and moves slowly and awkwardly toward a
grasp of just a few of the central theses of Descartes' system. The
meditator of the Meditations is not a full-blown Cartesian at the
start or middle or even the end of inquiry, and accordingly the
Meditations is riddled with confusions throughout. Cunning argues
that Descartes is trying to capture the kind of reasoning that a
non-Cartesian would have to engage in to make the relevant
epistemic progress, and that the Meditations rhetorically models
that reasoning. He proposes that Descartes is reflecting on what
happens in philosophical inquiry: we are unclear about something,
we roam about using our existing concepts and intuitions, we
abandon or revise some of these, and then eventually we come to see
a result as clear that we did not see as clear before. Thus
Cunning's fundamental insight is that Descartes is a teacher, and
the reader a student. With that reading in mind, a significant
number of the interpretive problems that arise in the Descartes
literature dissolve when we make a distinction between the
Cartesian and non-Cartesian elements of the Meditations, and a
better understanding of surrounding texts is achieved as well. This
important volume will be of great interest to scholars of early
modern philosophy.
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