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Opposing Views On The Goals Of Descartes Philosophy

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Descartes’ philosophy
The definition of “knowledge” in philosophy is that someone believes what they know as to be true, the statement that is based on facts is true, or believing in the true statement makes the person justified. Skepticism refers to an attitude of doubt toward a particular subject or basic religious principle. Skepticism in philosophy is the sets of positive statements which is certain to be true, being obvious and authoritative. Descartes' philosophy was an original thought process and has a lot of doubt, but did not have very good reasoning. If bad thinking was getting in the way of good thinking then bad thinking needed to be destroyed and good thinking needed to be left-over. For example, if there was a fake and real diamond, then we needed to smash the fake diamonds until the only …show more content…

Although he was an important philosopher, he had been through a lot of failures in his lifetime. Descartes built a set of skeptical arguments that reaches a climax of highest development in the Arguments of Possibility. Descartes claimed that an atheist did not have a knowledge of science of theorem as for all he knew there might have been an act of deceiving God and this undermined the theorem knowledge. Descartes' other method to undermine the claim of knowledge is to show a reason that supports a claim is not decisive enough to prevent an opposite reason from arising. The goal of Descartes was to suspend the judgment for anything that he believed even if it was a little bit doubtful. However, according to the skeptical scenario all his beliefs from the first meditation, besides his least belief in the physical world, is doubtful. Thus, he made up his mind with

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