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St. Augustine's Press |
How to Read Descartes's Meditations consists of seven independent studies of Descartes's Meditations. The discussion in each chapter is organized around one problem which
either has never or very seldom been explored in Cartesian scholarship. For example, in
the study of the Letter to the Sorbonne, Janowski centers his discussion around the
decree of the Lateran Council, showing the unorthodox character of Descartes's conception
of the soul. Further, in his chapter devoted to the notoriously difficult proof for the
existence of God in the Third Meditation, Janowski shows that to understand properly
Descartes's explicitly Scholastic proof is to read it as a reformulation of Duns Scotus's
own proof. And in the final chapter on the Sixth Meditation, the author shows that
Modern (Cartesian) Man – the man whose soul is no longer the Scholastic anima but
blood that animates his bones, veins, and muscles - germinated in the writings of Francis
Bacon, a predecessor never properly acknowledged by Descartes. |
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How to Read Descartes’s Meditations |