![]() ![]() ![]() The translations present in this edition were composed by the Scottish poet and scholar of philosophy John Vietch, whose academic career at The University of St. Descartes devotes further pages of explanation to the mind and the body, discussing his perception of each. ![]() Later meditations expound further on the themes of truth and the divine, and of the nature of the physical world around the human body. Can the mind be proven to be truly separate and distinct from the body, or is it actually true that the two are purposely interlinked and co-dependent? The second meditation sees Descartes express doubt as to whether any of his theorising can be proven true. Discounting God as the culprit, Descartes instead places responsibility of the illusion of reality at the feet of a 'malignant demon'. Descartes describes a series of vivid dreams which, for their realism, leave him in doubt as to whether he does indeed possess a body or whether it is merely an illusion.ĭescartes reflects upon the nature of dreams, and wonders whether their strangeness is not a consequence of God playing a trick with his mind. ![]() Written by René Descartes in the 17th century and counted among the first great philosophic works of Enlightenment era, these papers contain the philosopher's thoughts on the nature physical objects, presence and being. Several of Descarte's most groundbreaking essays and treatises are contained in this superb, unabridged edition. ![]()
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