¶ … Descartes' famous maxim "I; I "? Why statement fundamental method? (3-4 Paragraphs) Describe Newton's method. How arrive conclusions? (3-4Paragraphs) Describe views John Locke: state nature, social contract, revolution, govern, property rights.
Q1.Descartes
Descartes began his famous series of Meditations with a resolution to doubt everything: this kind of hyperbolic skepticism was used to advance his use of the deductive approach to philosophy. Descartes was fundamentally a rationalist, and believed that truth could be obtained only through mental reasoning, not through observation. Observation was rooted 'in the body' and potentially faulty, human observation. At the beginning of his philosophical tract, "his basic strategy was to consider false any belief that falls prey to even the slightest doubt" including his own existence (Skirry 2008). Sensations can deceive us, but logic cannot, since even if we are dreaming, 2+2=4. Eventually, after engaging in radical questioning of his belief structures, Descartes decided that because some entity is thinking and doing the doubting than 'I' (Descartes) exist.
"Descartes distinguishes intellectual perception and volition as what properly belongs to the nature of the mind alone while imagination and sensation are, in some sense, faculties of the mind insofar as it is united with a body" (Skirry 2008). The body, because of the subjective nature of sensation, can deceive us, but the mind cannot -- therefore 'I think; therefore I am.' Through rationalism and reason, Descartes makes 'I think, therefore I am' the core of his philosophy. "For if I convinced myself that my beliefs are false, then surely there must be an 'I' that was convinced. Moreover, even if I am being deceived by an evil demon, I must exist in order to be deceived at all" (Skirry 2008)....
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