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2010 | 24 | 133-141

Article title

Cartesian Common Sense?

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The paper considers the question of what role the notion of common sense plays in Descartes’ philosophy. What I’d like to draw attention to is not the Aristotelian concept of koiné aisthésis or the sceptical method applied in Meditations, but Descartes’ usage of the concept of good sense (le bon sens or bona mens) as we can find it e.g. at the beginning of Descartes’ first published work, Discourse on the method. The paper presents an overview of occurences of the term in Descartes’ works since the remains of his youthful writing, known under the title Studium bonae mentis to the preface to the French edition of the Principles. The paper states some reasons for interpreting Cartesian mind in the vein of this le bon sens. Distinguishing between mens and anima, we can come to an interpretation of Descartes’ writings on first philosophy more as writings in logical semantics. And in the end possible source of the concept is located in Seneca’s writings.

Contributors

  • actacom@lorien.site.cas.cz

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-bfb0eaff-1303-4223-bb5e-40dfdf527d93
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