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caroljm36
Guest
JPII was just making the commonplace point that modern skepticism started with the cogito. I remember that from my Philosophy survey. After this you get critiques by Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Kant…down to the most recent existentialists and whatever. Philosophers were having a really hard problem irrefutably proving that anything was real, because the natural world could be just all an illusion. Poor ol Descartes was trying to help, by starting with something he thought unassailable, but instead his successors showed where he was wrong, and it turns out that pure philosophy is still not so sure anything really exists. After all, you can’t prove it irrefutably! So we ended up with postmodernism, deconstructionism–since we are not certain about reality then there is no real meaning either, blah blah. Life was so meaningless and contingent, according the Sartre, that the only rational reaction was nausea. The cogito contained the seeds of self-annihilation, which is being reaped all around us as we can see.
Trouble is, it goes against all common sense. A person could not really live his life that way, as Chesterton and many others pointed out. We do indeed know things are real and base our actions on this reality every day.
Trouble is, it goes against all common sense. A person could not really live his life that way, as Chesterton and many others pointed out. We do indeed know things are real and base our actions on this reality every day.