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pcg2
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I am taking a philosophy course, right now focusing on Descartes’ Meditations. There’s a confusing passage in the first meditation that begins:
“… there is an all-powerful God who made me to be the kind of creature that I am. How do I know that he has not brought it about that there is no earth, no sky, nothing that takes up space, no shape, no size, no place while making sure that all these things appear to me to exist?.. how do I know that God has not brought it about that I… go wrong every time I add two and three or count the sides of a square?..”
Descartes quickly advances a number of skeptical arguments. The arguments seem to be designed to convince us that we don’t know (for certain?) even the “transparent truths” of elementary arithmetic and geometry. The argument goes something like this:
I’m stuck. It’s the first premise that bothers me. How do we know that God hasn’t “tricked” us into this kind of reality? I’m not a skeptic, but I can’t seem to find a way to refute the first premise
Any comments/refutations/assistance?
“… there is an all-powerful God who made me to be the kind of creature that I am. How do I know that he has not brought it about that there is no earth, no sky, nothing that takes up space, no shape, no size, no place while making sure that all these things appear to me to exist?.. how do I know that God has not brought it about that I… go wrong every time I add two and three or count the sides of a square?..”
Descartes quickly advances a number of skeptical arguments. The arguments seem to be designed to convince us that we don’t know (for certain?) even the “transparent truths” of elementary arithmetic and geometry. The argument goes something like this:
- I don’t know that God has not brought it about that I go wrong every time I add 2 and 3, etc. (God has not brought it about that I believe 2+3 make 5, when in fact 2+3 don’t make 5?)
- If I don’t know that, then I don’t know (for certain) that 2+3 make 5, etc.
- Therefore, I don’t know for certain that 2+3 make 5, etc.
I’m stuck. It’s the first premise that bothers me. How do we know that God hasn’t “tricked” us into this kind of reality? I’m not a skeptic, but I can’t seem to find a way to refute the first premise