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  1. If Descartes’ sensory experience of sitting by the fire could be caused by an evil demon, Descartes does not know that he is sitting by the fire. It is important to note that Descartes is not suggesting that such a demon exists – the mere possibility of the demon existing suffices to deprive Descartes of knowledge.

  2. Descartes went through three increasingly strong arguments in an attempt to bring doubt to every single thing that he knew. The first is the argument from illusion, in which he suggests that his senses may deceive him as to what he experiences (Draw diagram as a memory aid). In his next argument he strengthens this by questioning whether ...

  3. This argument has come to be known the ‘cogito’, earning its name from the phrase ‘cogito ergo sum’ meaning "I think therefore I am". It is used by Descartes in his Discourse on Method and the Meditations. In his search for unassailable knowledge, Descartes reaches in his first Meditation a hurdle in the form of his deceiving demon ...

  4. The indivisibility argument rests on Leibniz’ principle of the indiscernibility of identicals which states that a substance A can only be identical to a substance B if and only if it shares at least all of the same properties. The body, Descartes claims, is divisible for example, one can remove a limb. However, the mind does not share this ...

  5. Descartes is a rationalist and therefore believes in a priori knowledge. A priori knowledge is knowledge that does not require sense (sense) experience to be known as true. In contrast a posteriori propositions are necessarily true on the basis of experience, for example 'all bachelors are unmarried men.' is necessarily true.

  6. Outline Descartes' conceivability argument (5 marks) Descartes’ argument from conceivability for the mind and body as distinct substances is presented in Meditations VI. Descartes stars by asserting that he has a clear and distinct idea of himself as something that thinks and isn’t extended; takes up no physical space.

  7. Descartes defines the mind as something which only thinks and is not 'extended', and the body as something which is only extended but does not think. He claims that these two ideas are clearly and distinctly conceived. According to Leibniz's 'principle of the indiscernability of universals', identical substances share the same properties since ...

  8. Descartes’ first principle, then, is that he exists as a conscious thing. He will then try to prove the existence of God and the external world on the basis of this, but his arguments end up being circular. Perhaps, then, the Method of Doubt is, in some sense, too successful for Descartes to be able to arrive at useful knowledge.

  9. Descartes' senses dictate that this is a completely different object, as it shares none of the sensory qualities with the wax he held in his hand. However, as Descartes points out, this is absurd. Despite what our senses would tell us, we know that the same object that it was before it melted as it is after.

  10. The method of doubt is a method developed by the philosopher René Descartes (1596 -1650) in his famous essay, Meditations on First Philosophy (1641). Descartes goal was to find a method which allowed him to find true knowledge. In his First Meditation, Descartes concluded that many of his beliefs turned to be false.

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