Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the external world

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Descartes and Descartes and Hume on Hume on knowledge of the knowledge of the external world external world Michael Lacewing enquiries@alevelphiloso phy.co.uk

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Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the external world. Michael Lacewing [email protected]. Descartes: Meditation II. At first, our idea of the wax is of something defined by its sensory properties. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the external world

Page 1: Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the external world

Descartes and Hume on Descartes and Hume on knowledge of the knowledge of the

external worldexternal world

Michael [email protected]

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Descartes: Meditation II At first, our idea of the wax is of

something defined by its sensory properties.

But this is muddled: when I melt a piece of wax, it loses all of its original sensory qualities, yet I believe it is the same wax.

This shows our conception of material objects, when clear and distinct, is as changeable and extended.

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Meditations V and VI

Meditation V: we can know that clear and distinct ideas are true; so material objects really are extended, if they exist at all.

Meditation VI: We have experiences of an external world, which must either be caused by a real external world or God. God is not a deceiver. Therefore material objects do exist. – Note: we can only infer, from the fact that God is not

a deceiver, that there really is an extended world because we have done everything possible to avoid error.

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Descartes’ conclusion

Our idea that material objects are extended and changeable is clear and distinct.

We can know there is an external, material world. We can know, therefore, that the external world

is an extended world. Sensory qualities do not properly belong to material objects (primary/secondary quality distinction).

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Hume’s sceptical argument

1. We are naturally disposed to believe in the external world, and at first we think that our impressions are straightforward representations of it, i.e. perfectly resemble it.

2. On reflection, we don’t suppose a table gets smaller as we move away.

3. So we must accept that what is immediately available to the mind is only ideas, which don’t resemble objects perfectly; yet we continue to think that the objects represented persist independently of our impressions.

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Hume’s argument (cont.)

4. But now we must wonder how we can show that our impressions must be caused by such independent objects!

5. Experience can’t show this, because all that experience has available is the impressions themselves, not the connexion between impressions and objects.

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Hume’s argument (cont.)

6. We cannot use God to prove the existence of the external world. First, if God can never deceive us, then our senses must be infallible – which they are not; and second, we can’t prove the existence of God if we can’t even prove the existence of the external world.

7. The belief in the external world, therefore, is groundless.

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Hume on primary and secondary qualities

We have no more reason to think primary qualities belong to material objects ‘in themselves’ than secondary qualities do:– We have nothing but our impressions to go on,

and these don’t distinguish between the two.– Our concept of extension is derived from the

senses, not the understanding.

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Contrast

Hume’s attack on using God fails:– God is not part of the external material world– Descartes argues that God’s not being a

deceiver does not make us infallible On extension

– Hume: our idea of extension must be formed by abstraction from sense experience

– Descartes: it cannot be; but our conception of extension is still about what we sense

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Compare

Only impressions and ideas are immediately present to the mind– Without God, Descartes also ends up a sceptic.– Arguing for naïve realism undermines both

philosophers.

Both allow knowledge of geometry– Hume: relations of ideas– Descartes: knowledge of essential properties of

objects

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Rationalism and empiricism

Descartes’ rationalism:– arguments for God– experiences must have a cause– comprehension of material objects as extended doesn’t

derive from the senses Hume’s empiricism:

– the idea of extension derives from the senses– attack on primary/secondary quality distinction– we don’t know experience must have a cause, and could

only know the causes of experience from experience itself