Lecture 19 Notes

Meditation 5

 

Plan of the Lecture

I.    A Word of Background
II.   First Proof of God's Existence
III.  The Argument of Meditation 5
IV.   Objections
V.   The Cartesian Circle

I.    A Word of Background

 

II.   First Proof of God's Existence

  1. Consider a character on "Melrose Place": Amanda.  Now consider the producer of "Melrose Place": Aaron Spelling.  Can Amanda be the cause of Aaron Spelling?  he of her?  The answer seems to be "no", and it is grounded on Principle A: A fictional character can’t cause a non-fictional one.  To see why Principle A is true, let’s ask another question:
  2. There is a device running through a memorable episode of "Party of Five".  Julia’s boyfriend is writing story optimistically based on them.  But he is fictional TV character and the characters in his story are fictional too.  Could they cause him?  Could he cause them?  This gives us Principle B: A cause must have at least as much reality as its effect: "there must at least be as much reality in the efficient and total cause as in its effect" (Meditation 3, Paragraph 14).

III.   The Argument of Meditation 5

A.   The Veracity of Clear and Distinct Perception

  1. Some truths seem to have an obviousness about them. They have what philosophers have since called "self-evidence", e.g. 2+2=4, "every bachelor is unmarried", "squares have 4 sides", and "parallel lines never meet".  These are things we perceive clearly and distinctly to be true. Descartes thinks that everything that has this obviousness about it must be true.
  2. "Natural light" is by Descartes’s time a dead metaphor.  It began with theological provenance: in Augustine, light is Christ's provenance.  The metaphor is therefore ironic

B.   Perception of God's Nature is Clear and Distinct


"It is certain that I no less find the idea of a God in my consciousness, that is the idea of a being supremely perfect, than that of any figure or number whatever: and I know with not less clearness and distinctness that an [actual and] eternal existence pertains to his nature than that all which is demonstrable of any figure or number really belongs to the nature of that figure or number." (Meditation 5, Paragraph 7)

C.   (A) + (B), Descartes thinks, Demonstrates that God Exists

  1. Everything Descartes perceives clearly and distinctly is true.
  2. Descartes perceives clearly and distinctly that existence belongs to the nature of God.
  3. Therefore, "although all the conclusions of the preceding Meditations were false, the existence of God would pass with me for a truth at least as certain as I ever judged any truth of mathematics to be". (Meditation 5, Paragraph 7)

 

D.   Ontological Argument

IV.   Objections

A.   Is Existence Really a Perfection?

B.   Do We Really Conceive of God Clearly and Distinctly?

 

V.   The Cartesian Circle

A.   Statement of Premise 1

B.   How Does Descartes Justify Premise 1?

"for I may persuade myself that I have been so constituted by nature as to be sometimes deceived, even in matters which I think I apprehend with the greatest evidence and certitude, especially when I recollect that I frequently considered many things to be true and certain which other reasons afterward constrained me to reckon as wholly false.  But after I have discovered that God exists, seeing I also at the same time observed that all things depend on him, and that he is no deceiver, and thence inferred that all which I clearly and distinctly perceive is of necessity true.... And thus I very clearly see that the certitude and truth of all science depends on the knowledge alone of the true God, insomuch that, before I knew him, I could have no perfect knowledge of any other thing." (Meditation 5, Paragraphs 14-16)

C.   The Trouble

 

Citation: Weithman, P. (2006, September 19). Lecture 19 Notes. Retrieved November 23, 2009, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/philosophy/introduction-to-philosophy/lectures/lecture-19-notes.
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