1. Give a
one- or two-sentence overview of each of the meditations?.
2. What does heuristic
mean?
3. Why is
Descartes’ heuristic method important to this philosophical work? Why might we even say that the method
embodies or expresses an important element of Descartes’ philosophy?
4. How does
Descartes’ search for knowledge differ from Aristotle’s explanation of
knowledge?
5. How can you
characterize Descartes’ doubt? What does
it mean to say that Descartes’ method is a method of doubt?
6. What’s the
problem with trying to destroy all past beliefs?
7. Why does
Descartes use the dream hypothesis and the “evil genius” hypothesis?
8. What is
one of the most important foundations of Descartes’ past belief?
9. Why does
Descartes try to be even more skeptical than the skeptics?
10, What is
the status of the past in Descartes’ Meditations?
11. At the
beginning of Meditation #2, the Meditator renews his commitment to doubt. What do you think of his comparison with a
man in a whirlpool?
12. Since in
Meditation #2 (and for some time to come), Descartes’ Meditator does not have a
body, he has to discard all activities or processes concerned with the
body. What does he discover that he is?
13. What does
the example of the wax prove?
14. What does
Descartes say imagining is?
15. Why does
Descartes shut his eyes and stop up his ears at the beginning of Meditation #3?
16. What is
the difference between “objective reality” and “formal reality”?
17. What is a
“formal” cause? an “eminent” cause?
18, Descartes
says that his own existence and his having the idea of God “demonstrates most
evidently that God too exists” (80). Can
you retrace his argument so far to explain why he can say that this is so?.
Use “Reading closely”(creating a study
page for Meditation #3) to make up and
answer further questions on Meditation #3.
19. Does Descartes have a body at the beginning of
Meditation #6?
20. Review
and explain Descartes’ distinction between thinking and imagining.
21. What is
Descartes’ essence? Does it include
imagining?
22, On p. 94,
Descartes sets up a general review. What
does he say he’s going to do?
23. How does
Descartes characterize the difference between mind and body?
24. Can
Descartes understand himself without taking “the faculties of imagining and
sensing into account” (96)?
25. Why is an
extended thing necessary for the Meditator’s understanding of sensing,
imagining, moving from one place to another, etc. (96)?
26. What does
Descartes mean when he says “And consequently corporeal things exist. Nevertheless, perhaps not all bodies exist
exactly as I grasp them by sense, since this sensory grasp is in many cases
very obscure and confused” (97)?
27. Why does
Descartes keep considering what nature teaches him?
28. Why does Descartes
say he can set aside the “hyperbolic doubts of the last few days” (101)?
29. What problem remains?
Three discussion
questions:
1. Why do you
trust your senses? What do you trust
your sense for?
2. Why do you
think Descartes wants to [has to] prove God’s existence?
3. Why does
Descartes call his philosophical work a meditation?