Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introductory essay
- General introduction
- Chronology
- Further reading
- Note on the text and the translation
- Meditations on First Philosophy
- First Meditation: What can be called into doubt
- Second Meditation: The nature of the human mind, and how it is better known than the body
- Third Meditation: The existence of God
- Fourth Meditation: Truth and falsity
- Fifth Meditation: The essence of material things, and the existence of God considered a second time
- Sixth Meditation: The existence of material things, and the real distinction between mind and body
- Selections from the Objections and Replies
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy
Sixth Meditation: The existence of material things, and the real distinction between mind and body
from Meditations on First Philosophy
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introductory essay
- General introduction
- Chronology
- Further reading
- Note on the text and the translation
- Meditations on First Philosophy
- First Meditation: What can be called into doubt
- Second Meditation: The nature of the human mind, and how it is better known than the body
- Third Meditation: The existence of God
- Fourth Meditation: Truth and falsity
- Fifth Meditation: The essence of material things, and the existence of God considered a second time
- Sixth Meditation: The existence of material things, and the real distinction between mind and body
- Selections from the Objections and Replies
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy
Summary
It remains for me to examine whether material things exist. And at least I now know they are capable of existing, in so far as they are the subject-matter of pure mathematics, since I perceive them clearly and distinctly. For there is no doubt that God is capable of creating everything that I am capable of perceiving in this manner; and I have never judged that something could not be made by him except on the grounds that there would be a contradiction in my perceiving it distinctly. The conclusion that material things exist is also suggested by the faculty of imagination, which I am aware of using when I turn my mind to material things. For when I give more attentive consideration to what imagination is, it seems to be nothing else but an application of the cognitive faculty to a body which is intimately present to it, and which therefore exists.
To make this clear, I will first examine the difference between imagination and pure understanding. When I imagine a triangle, for example, I do not merely understand that it is a figure bounded by three lines, but at the same time I also see the three lines with my mind's eye as if they were present before me; and this is what I call imagining. But if I want to think of a chiliagon, although I understand that it is a figure consisting of a thousand sides just as well as I understand the triangle to be a three-sided figure, I do not in the same way imagine the thousand sides or see them as if they were present before me.
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- Descartes: Meditations on First PhilosophyWith Selections from the Objections and Replies, pp. 50 - 62Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
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