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10 - Meditation Six (II) : The Meditator establishes that extramental corporeal things definitely exist, confirms that she has a personal body to which she is united, and learns that neither her sensations nor her perceptions resemble their causes in the external world

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Catherine Wilson
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
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Summary

THE ACTIVE CAUSE OF IDEAS – CORPOREAL THINGS EXIST (AT VII:78–80)

Though perception and imagination have been deemed faculties that are not essential to the Meditator, the operation of those faculties implies the existence of a thinking substance: “I can clearly and distinctly understand myself as a whole without those faculties; but I cannot, conversely, understand those faculties without me, that is, without an intellectual substance to inhere in.” Wherever there is conscious awareness of objects, there is a mind; no mere body, the Meditator is convinced, can perceive, imagine, or feel. What can she now conclude about the source of her perceptions and sensory experiences?

The Meditator knows that some ideas do not come from the senses. The non-pictorial ideas of the self and of God were not passively received by the senses. They were found within the mind after a search during which she ignored the sensory impressions that might have been only demonic interference. At the same time, the Meditator seems to have a faculty, albeit a nonessential faculty, that is independent of her will, for “receiving and recognizing” the ideas of corporeal things.

From her knowledge that the malevolent Demon does not exist and the observation that she seems to receive and recognize ideas of corporeal things, can the Meditator conclude that extramental corporeal things exist? This inference would be overhasty.

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Chapter
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Descartes's Meditations
An Introduction
, pp. 195 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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