Study GuideWeek Five: Descartes’ Foundationalism - Rebuilding Knowledge from the Foundations
I. Materials Assigned for the Week
II. The Central Point of This Week's MaterialOnce the "foundations" of knowledge have been laid clear, then further claims about the world of everyday physical objects can be "built up" upon them. These will count as genuine knowledge in the sense of being true beliefs reliably justified. Building up such knowledge requires a proper understanding of the real sources of human error; a proper understanding of the human faculties of understanding, imagination and sensation; and in particular a proper appreciation of the boundaries beyond which sensation cannot be reliably pushed. These are summarised in Descartes' final bridging principle from "inner" to "outer": III. Other Concepts and Arguments You Are Expected to Master This Week
IV. Miscellaneous Comments and ClarificationsIV.A What Happens After the Existence of God is Proved?Descartes finishes proving the existence of a perfect God in Meditation Three. But he doesn't think he has answered the sceptic's challenge until the end of Meditation Six. Why does Descartes need three more chapters - and especially convoluted chapters at that? Sober understandably shortcuts most of this additional stuff and says that the non-deceptiveness of God guarantees that clear and distinct ideas are true and more or less leaves it at that (pp. 173-174). You are not required to go beyond Sober's shortcut of course - Sober is the textbook after all. But I have asked you to read those three additional chapters of Descartes; so I owe you some rough sketch of what they are there for, and what they add to Sober's quick summing up.
Happily, I am not talking about anything particularly exotic or even very hard to understand. The material in Meditations Four through Six is driven in a very natural way by the precise sort of worry which Descartes' sceptic is running. The sceptic argues that we can not provide proper justification for knowledge claims about the physical world because it is always open for us to make mistakes about them - only knowledge of the contents of our private subjective experience is incorrigible. Such a sceptical worry about what is ultimately responsible for the mistakes we make won't be laid to rest until we come to a proper understanding of the real sources of human error and hence come to a proper understanding of the ways to circumvent such errors. Specifically, Descartes insists, we must realise that human error is not after all the result of trickery by some superior power (which presumably we could never escape), but entirely the result of ourselves misapplying our own freewill (which we therefore have some hope of detecting and stopping). Here then is the plot line of the rest of the Meditations.
IV.B The Real Source Of Human Error: Meditations Four and SixThe real source of human error has never actually been undetectable deception by some Evil Genius or the like, but the simple fact that we possess the faculty of freewill and freely choose to misuse it! When Descartes first broaches this startling idea (pp. 223-236), he has already proved the existence of God and stated that God has bestowed upon us several mental faculties: sensation, imagination, emotion, understanding, deliberation and the like. Accordingly, if I used any faculty which God gave me only in the way in which God designed it to be used, then I could never make errors (pg. 235) - or not anyway through my use of that faculty. Error comes in because another of my God-given faculties - freewill - has no natural boundaries. Freewill couldn't have boundaries to its application like the other faculties have, of course, or else it wouldn't be a faculty which was truly free - freedom circumscribed isn't freedom at all. [More of this in Week Eleven.] Now, if by using my freewill I freely choose to overextend one of my other faculties beyond its proper boundaries, then I have in effect freely chosen to push that faculty into areas where it is incompetent to act. Of course errors will happen then. And when they do it's down to me, not down to some hypothetical Evil Genius, nor down to a perfect God. Take three of the faculties prominent in Meditation Six as examples of faculties with boundaries or limits to them. Used inside of those limits they provide reliable results. Used outside of those limits they don't. Think of a simple thermometer too [compare the discussion of "Circumstantial Reliability" as a definition or theory of knowledge in Week Three].
Several obvious notions come together here, applicable to all the various mental faculties:
When we freely choose to push such God-given faculties as the intellect or imagination or sensation beyond their proper limits - that is, when we apply them to the wrong sorts of ideas in our minds - then naturally enough we are going to make errors all over the place. When we freely choose not to do so, then we do not make errors. [For if we still did, then that would be down to God. And God is not a deceiver. Blah blah blah.] So actually free will is at the root of it all. The Evil Genius never actually had any part to play! That gives the broad idea. We must slow down even more for the details. The sorts of cases in Meditation One where the sceptic undermined Descartes most convincingly were mistakes of perception. That is, cases where we make wrong judgements about the contents of world "outside" of our minds on the basis of the contents of the perceptual experiences we have "inside" our minds. For instance, when I judge that I am typing away on an off-white keyboard on the basis of my being conscious of off-white patches of colour and feelings of pressure. If this is the main battleground, we must be especially clear what the proper boundaries of our God-given mental faculty of sensation are supposed to be for Descartes. Sensation is the entirely passive reception of images by the mind. The key fact about sensing is that I am not myself responsible for the presence of such images. They are forced upon my mind, intruding, as Descartes puts it, "without my co-operation and sometimes against my will" (pg. 246). They "come upon me without my consent" (pg. 244). Such intrusion is quite the opposite of those images which I fashion myself and have complete control of in imagining (imagination is an entirely different God-given mental faculty). For example, when you sense this piece of paper you are reading - as opposed to imagine it later on - your mind is downright compelled to receive the ideas you do whether you want them or not: you may prefer to have a sensation of red, or no sensation at all, but a white image is what you get. This compellingness of the ideas his mind comes to have when he senses is the defining characteristic of the faculty of sensation (pg. 246). Descartes even produces a little proof in Meditation Six that such compellingness is not a feature of how some of our ideas merely appear to us "from the inside" as it were. The compellingness of ideas in sensation is a real phenomenon, a feature of how the world itself is actually constituted (pg. 246):
By now it should be obvious why Descartes makes the faculty of sensation the centre-piece of Meditation Six. In order for me to possess the passive faculty of receiving ideas - as it has just been proved I do indeed possess - something other than me must possess the active faculty of producing such ideas. Once this general principle is established, the problem of determining which specific physical thing is the active producer of which passive idea I receive in some perceptual situation can be tackled on a case by case basis. My mind is passive in sensation. So whatever thing possesses the active faculty of producing the ideas which I passively receive in sensation, it must be some thing different than my own mind. We might usefully recall the causal principle of Meditation Three: "The cause of any idea must possess at least as much formal reality as that idea has objective reality" (pp. 226-227). This means that the active producer of my passively received idea (my sensation) must lie "on or above the line" on the "formal reality" side of the "objective reality" / "formal reality" box [see Week 4 IV.D] which means my sensations must be caused by a physical body of some sort, or else by a "creature more noble than a body" such as an angel, or else by God. It has been proved that God is not a deceiver, but he certainly would be a deceiver if he created me, produced every image of a physical object I received, stuck me with an overwhelming inclination to believe all such images were produced by physical objects, and doomed me to be forever unable to tell the difference. God would be just as much a deceiver if he allowed his angels to pull off the same trick. So the active producers must lie exactly "on the line" and not anywhere above it. We aren't required to go to anything as strong as Descartes' Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle to know merely that physical objects of some kind or another are the causes of my passively received ideas of physical objects (pg. 246). To know that, however, is not to know very much. What we really want is knowledge that exactly this kind of physical object is the cause of exactly this passively received idea or sensation. Here nothing less than the full-bore Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle will deliver the goods. The non-existence and non-deceptiveness of God underwrites that principle in its most general form: Those ideas in my mind which are clear and distinct are guaranteed to be true The existence and non-deceptiveness of God likewise underwrites the modest extension of this principle to the images I passively receive in sensation (pg. 246): Those passively received ideas of sensation I have which are clear and distinct are guaranteed to be true That is, whatever clear and distinct ideas of physical objects I passively receive in my mind have been caused to get there by physical objects which are exactly similar to those passively received ideas. God guarantees this.
On the other hand, this is not quite a guarantee that we never go wrong. It's just a caution that when we do, we can't put the blame on some super-power tricking us in ways we are powerless to detect, for there are no such super-powers. Instead, we have only ourselves to blame when we make mistakes. And mistakes are something we do obviously makes lots and lots of the time. But - Descartes' key point - we make them only when we freely choose to misuse our abilities. For instance, we make mistakes whenever we freely choose to misuse our God-given ability to detect passivity from activity, and start to reason from the occurrence of an idea of imagination which we ourselves have actively produced rather than from the occurrence of an idea of sensation we have passively received. Presumably this is what happens when we frighten ourselves silly telling horror stories at night. Likewise, we also make mistakes whenever we freely choose to apply our intellect upon a passively received idea which is beyond the boundaries of our intellect to handle - namely any idea which is not clear and distinct. Presumably this is what lies behind the teacher's warning never to rely too heavily on how the diagrams drawn on the board in geometry classes look (for they make draw irrelevancies into the proof). Happily, because this is trouble entirely of our own devising, it is trouble which we ourselves can prevent, by freely choosing to reign back our use of intellect only to ideas that are clear and distinct. IV.C Descartes' Argument Against Scepticism: Meditation SixThere is a truncated version of Descartes' final deductive argument in Sober, pg. 173. The Logical Form Of Descartes' Foundationalist Answer To A ScepticHere is basically the same argument "stretched out" on a slightly longer table. I try to make more explicit some of the points of logical structure upon which the whole pivots. You can do even better by further substituting meaningless letters for items of content [see Week 2 IV.C]. Once you know the structural plan or "logic" of the thing, you can more easily test that structure for validity, and you can more easily fill in the rest under emergency conditions (exams, self-checking, tutorials, defending yourself and the like).
This is a nifty argument. It has many more virtues than it may seem at first glance. For a start, it is a valid deductive argument - no prize to be sneezed at. But even more important, Descartes seems to be tackling the sceptical problem: "How can you get from the inner to the outer?" in exactly the right way. The argument has the right "feel" to it. What Descartes does is first identify a purely inwardly-detectable property which certain of our inner contents have ("clearness and distinctness"). Then he shows that inner contents which possess that special property must also possess another, outwardly-directed, property. They must be true of the world outside of the mind. What guarantees this is the proven fact that a perfect God exists and therefore an Evil Genius cannot exist - since it is possible for an idea in the mind to have the first of those properties but not the second only in a world where a systematic but undetectable deceiver is running amok (or where God is that very deceiver). This is the pivotal result of the Meditations. It can now be expressed as the general rule "clear and distinct ideas are true" - namely the rule I have been calling Descartes' "Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle". Moreover, Descartes can now rightly claim to know that this rule is absolutely reliable (because, once again, it could be false only if some super-deceiver still lurked, which is logically incompatible with God's existence). Armed with such a rule, we have finally got our hands on precisely that bridging principle between "inner" and "outer" which will reclaim most of the beliefs we earlier had to set aside. To be sure, knowledge about any matter which goes over and beyond those of our private "inner" mental ideas which form the foundations of knowledge will not count as "foundational" knowledge. But based as it is in canonical ways on canonical foundations, it does constitute knowledge about the "outer" public physical in some fairly robust sense of "knowledge" - "justified true belief" about the contents of the world at large beyond our individual souls. The sceptic's overall charge was to claw back our shared world, when each of us was forced to start anew at the solitary subjective world of our own conscious experiences. The Foundationalist has now done exactly that. An Example of Such An Argument Against Scepticism of the SensesThe best way to assess whether Descartes' final argument is actually going to make any impact against the sceptic who has been running him ragged, is to fill in to logical form of the wholesale argument with a specific example. This is exactly what Sober does on pg. 173. In fact, he actually discusses the more general form of Descartes' argument only after presenting his sample case (bottom of pg. 173 to top of pg. 174).
Sober thinks there is something fundamentally awry with every kind of Fundamentalist argument against scepticism of the senses, large or small. Many others agree with him. IV.D The "Cartesian Circle": Meditations Three and SixThe problem lies with the "Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle" that appears in Premise 2 and which seems so invulnerable: Clear and distinct ideas are guaranteed to be true ideas as well. First ProblemWe are supposed to rely on this principle only after we have proved the existence of a non-deceptive God and therefore the non-existence of any Evil Genius. Ultimately, that is, it is the non-deceptiveness of God which underwrites the Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle: it is because God exists and because God is non-deceptive, that God stands behind the veracity of any of our mental contents which are clear and distinct. Unfortunately, however, it is not as plain as it needs to be that Descartes hasn't somewhere had to sneak in exactly the Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle he wants to prove earlier on than the conclusion that God exists and is non-deceptive. In particular, Sober is suspicious that Descartes might be using that very Principle in order to prove that God exists, only to turn right around and use the conclusion that God exists in order to underwrite the Principle. It is not all that easy to tell whether this suspicion is on track or not. After all, Descartes' proof is long and complex [rehearse Week 4 IV.D for a moment]. It takes for granted that a huge number of distinctions are drawn at exactly the right places (e.g. between "thing" and "idea" in general, and specifically between "the supreme being God who is present throughout the universe" and "the idea of God I have in my own mind"). It draws upon lots of other concepts many of which no longer work for us exactly as they did for Descartes (e.g. that reality comes in "grades" and that different existing things can possess different "amounts" of reality). It requires unquestioning acceptance of other axioms that we aren't quite so confident are true (e.g. "every idea that exists in the mind must have been put into the mind by some cause or another"). It invokes an increasingly arcane procession of causal principles which are by no means obvious to anyone anymore (e.g. "an event or state can be caused only by a cause which possesses at least as much reality as its effect possesses", "an idea can be caused only by a cause which has at least as much formal reality as that effect has objective reality", and so on). When push comes to shove, can we be absolutely sure that Descartes has more justification up his sleeve for such bits of apparatus than: "I have a clear and distinct idea that so and so"? If Descartes ever argues in this way, even once, then he has used the principle "clear and distinct ideas are true" in order to arrive at the very materials which he needed to assemble before he could prove it! That would be to argue in a circle. The circle is famous, or more accurately, notorious. It is the so-called "Cartesian Circle", as Sober dubs it on pg. 172. If Descartes is indeed guilty of committing arguing in a "Cartesian Circle", then his whole proof, of everything, collapses into rubble. The disaster is easiest to illustrate in terms of an example:
Suppose this were more or less the way Descartes justifies his Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle, as Sober suspects. Then his justification of it would be blatantly circular and question-begging. Why? Because in order for Premise 1 to be true, Conclusion 7 has to have already been proved true! If Conclusion 7 is not yet available - which it isn't until it has been soundly deduced - then Descartes in fact has absolutely no reason at all to maintain the likes of Premise 1: "I know so and so because I have a clear and distinct idea in my mind that so and so". That is the meat of the charge which Sober levels: "Descartes commits the fallacy of the Cartesian Circle" (pg. 172). Whether Descartes actually does commit such a fallacy, that is another matter, and still a sharply-disputed one. I find it rather hard to believe that he did, since arguing in such a circle is such an obvious, and fatuous, mistake for someone as canny as Descartes to make. However, it has to be admitted that Descartes never takes the time to explain why he is entitled to help himself to quite so many of the tidbits he uses along his way; he certainly doesn't do much to dispel such a suspicion. (Nor is Descartes especially clear even on which position he would prefer to take if he could. For instance, he seems to claim he has the principle firmly available in his toolkit at the beginning of Meditation Three on pg. 223. That would be well before he officially begins the first of his proofs for God. But later he also seems to admit quit openly that he can be sure of its truth and reliability only after God's existence has been proved, in Meditation Five, pg. 241. Once you have finished reading the Meditations, you will have to decide for yourselves.) Second ProblemThere is another obvious oddity about clear and distinct ideas. Isn't it really a rather surprising fact that any of my ideas about the world beyond my private mind should have such a wonderful quality as being subjectively clear and distinct at all? Everything else in my life is such a mess. Isn't it more likely that I have just got carried away a bit. Perhaps I don't have any ideas with such a wonderful property. Indeed, perhaps no ideas whatever have any such wonderful property. That is, maybe I don't actually have any clear and distinct ideas in my mind at all, but it only seems to me that I do - illusions of grandeur come easy. This possibility means that Descartes is required to provide us with some way to tell when an idea in my mind really is clear and distinct rather than it merely seeming to be so. If he can't provide a method for testing this, then Descartes' disproof of scepticism is not going to work against any sceptic who keeps their head. Descartes' Foundationalist Argument will be formally consistent, all right. So he is well past the "First Problem" sort of problem. But that is not enough for Descartes' Foundationalist strategy actually to make the successes he wants of it. Any Foundationalist strategy against the sceptic must not merely be logically impeccable. It must actually generate real progress at the real coal face too. That is, the distinctions Descartes needs must be able to be made by human beings, on the fly, and more or less agreed to have been made by all parties. Sober says that the distinction between an idea which is actually clear and distinct and an idea which is not but merely seems to be clear and distinct at the time, is a perfectly understandable distinction in principle. However, it is not a distinction which any human being can actually get themselves into a position to make reliably. As far as theoretical principle goes: fine and dandy. As far as human practice in sito goes: impossible and unavailable. This is a flaw which must be put down to the failure of Foundationalism, for no one else claims it's do-able even in principle. Sober is discussing this rather more subtle point on pg. 173. Now, Descartes himself believed that he provided everything which was really needed for a usable division between "seems" and "is", simply by showing that that the existence of an Evil Genius is logically impossible. This guarantees, according to him,
Third ProblemThe two problems revolving around the "Cartesian Circle" are hard to resolve. But a third problem is not. This is a problem with the sort of sample case with which Sober illustrates how Descartes employs his "Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle" against the sceptic (pg. 173, amplified on pg. 174):
In my illustration of Descartes' final argument against scepticism of the senses, I used much the same kind of case:
What is the special problem with such cases? The problem is the bland assumption that the ideas inserted at Premise 1 would even count as the sorts of cases which Descartes is calling clear and distinct ideas in his Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle. "Clear and distinct" does mean something quite specific after all.
In order for some idea X to be a "clear and distinct idea", or in order for some idea X to be "perceived clearly and distinctly", I must have the whole of some idea X in my mind, and the idea in my mind must have no other ideas Y mixed in with it. Glaringly - and a bit astonishingly - neither of the supposedly clear and distinct ideas in Sober's Premise 1 nor in my Premise 1 come even close to satisfying either of these elementary definitions. Sober says his present belief that the object in front of him is a page is exactly such a clear and distinct idea. That means he must be claiming that his belief that some object in front of him is a page - or more accurately perhaps - his idea of a page is an idea which he has the whole of with no extraneous ideas mixed in with it. Descartes was hesitant to say this even about an idea as simple as "the earth" (pp. 223, 224). Such an idea does "hover before my mind" he says. But it always hovers there together with a whole raft of other ideas mixed in with it as well. He never has all and only the idea of the earth. For instance, mixed in with his idea of the earth are such ideas as these: "some things exist outside of me", "the thing which my idea of the earth is the idea of is similar to some things (such as the planets) and dissimilar to other things (the fixed stars)", "the earth proceeds from God while my idea of the earth proceeds from the earth", "it is 4 billion years old", "it is 6000 years old", "life started in the oceans of the thing my idea is the idea of". Now, where does Sober provide any justification at all that his idea of a page is obviously more clear and more distinct than Descartes' idea of the earth? Let's do the exercise for ourselves [always best]. Suppose my Sober text is on the table in front of me. I look down and the idea "that's a page" is forced into my mind, passively received by sensation.
Everything just said about Sober's case of the allegedly clear and distinct idea of a page of a book on pg. 373 can just as well be said about my own illustration of the allegedly clear and distinct idea of an off-white keyboard at the end of Week 5 IV.C. Let us suppose it is true that typing furiously on a computer forces an image of an off-white keyboard into my mind ("without my co-operation and even against my will"); and let us further suppose it is true that in those circumstances my mind is entirely a passive receptor of this image. Nonetheless, such an idea is about as distant from an idea satisfying Descartes' definition of a "clear and distinct" idea as it is possible to get. Typing away furiously, I never receive all of the idea of an off-white keyboard, the whole of that idea with no part of the idea left out. (Whatever that means.) Nor do I ever receive only the idea of an off-white keyboard, that idea exclusively with no part of any other idea mixed in with it. (Whatever that means.) Possibly the cases in Descartes' Meditation Five stand a better chance of being uncontroversial examples of ideas which are clear and distinct according to the canonical definition of "clear and distinct" - ideas which I have the whole of and unmixed with any other idea. The best candidate he has on offer is probably his case of the idea of a triangle: this is the idea of a three-sided three-angled figure, full stop. It is an idea which I usually entertain solely by the intellect but which I might sometimes passively receive in sensation (pp. 238-239). Just possibly Descartes could even sweet-talk us, momentarily, into believing that the idea of a perfect God is another clear and distinct idea (pp. 239-240) - though this would be more uphill. But against these paradigm examples, Sober's suggestion that the idea of a page of a book would satisfy Descartes' definition of a clear and distinct idea is out and out ludicrous. So too would be any serious proposal that the idea of an off-white keyboard was an example of a clear and distinct idea. And this ruins the proposed sample illustrations of Descartes defeating the sceptic. Maybe Descartes can defeat the sceptic eventually, in some limited areas. Maybe he can even defeat the sceptic using ideas garnered from perception. But the sample argument of Sober's at the top of pg. 173 and my sample argument a few pages back (just above the head with gears box) are simply horrible examples of the winning argument Descartes thinks he has produced the apparatus to give. In both, any claim that the idea in the mind which is used is a clear and distinct idea is utterly preposterous.
IV.E Three Special Cases For Advanced Readers: Meditation SixIn most cases we aren't working with ideas that meet the high standards of clarity and distinctness. More accurately, we aren't working with passively received images (sensations) which are clear and distinct. Since the Clear and Distinct Ideas Principle only works for clear and distinct ideas, non-clear or non-distinct ideas seem to offer no purchase for gaining knowledge of their causes in the world outside the mind. Descartes ends the Meditations by pointing out certain special cases in which something less strong than the full-blown Principle will still be strong enough. Special Case One: Sensations About My Own Body Are Caused By States Of My BodyThe ideas which sensation passively receives about my own body are interestingly unlike most of my other sensations (pp. 246-247). This provides them a new kind of justification.
This huge difference between the ideas which I receive and the ideas which the sailor receives proves that the relation between my mind and my body must be much tighter and more unified than the relation between a sailor and his ship. To be precise, it is so tightly connected that whenever my own body is harmed (or helped), sensation does not merely receive the idea "there is damage", which is an idea that is properly to be contemplated by my intellect. Sensation receives as well the idea "pain" or "hurt", which is a feeling available to be suffered by the faculty of emotion, and not an idea available in any way for inspection by the faculty of intellect . By contrast, whenever the body of the sailor's ship is harmed (or helped), the sailor passively receives only the idea "there is damage". This idea is of a sort available only to the sailor's faculty of intellect; certainly it is never available to the sailor's faculty of emotion. It can only be inspected. It can not be felt or suffered through; even when a sailor possesses the faculty of emotion, still that faculty can never be turned to that idea. The two cases are utterly different from each other, in two crucial ways:
The unique sensations I have of my own body in turn guarantee them a unique reliability: I can trust what I sense about the state of my own physical body, even when the ideas I have passively received in sensation are not clear and distinct. Special Case Two: Sensations About Things "pertaining To The Union Of Mind And Body" Are Caused By Those ThingsThe operative phrase here is "pertaining to the union of mind and body". There is no substantial "union" between the seaman and his ship - which is shown exactly by the fact that when his ship is damaged, the seaman does not feel the damage but can only appreciate with his intellect that damage has been done. But there is a substantial "union" between my mind and my body - which is shown exactly by the fact that when my body is damaged, I do feel pain as well as judge "damage". The "substantial union" between mind and body opens up a way to justify more physical objects than the box for Special Case One ever could (pp. 248-248). Also trustworthy will be any other judgements I make which: (a) are about that special union of mind and body, when (b) they are based on that special faculty who purpose is to inform me out about my union, viz. sensation. This allows us to back off from trusting only judgements about my own physical body, to trusting judgements about other physical objects as well, provided those other physical objects have some special bearing on ("pertain to") on the union which my body has with my mind. Descartes clarifies with three examples. A judgement which is about things that "pertain only to the mind" would be the judgement that what has been done cannot be undone. A judgement which is about things that "pertain only to the body" would be the judgement that physical bodies fall. A judgement about things that "pertain solely to the union of mind and body" would be that I should flee what brings me pain and pursue what brings me pleasure. Base these judgements on sensations, and the first two won't be reliable, but the third will. Why? Because sensation is a faculty of mind which, like every other faculty, we possess for a purpose. With the seaman / ship contrast in place, Descartes argues that the purpose of the particular faculty of sensation is not just to deliver truths about my own body, but to deliver truths about any physical objects pertaining to the union which that body has with my mind. [The seaman has no analogous faculty with regards his ship exactly because there is no analogous union between them.] Again as with every other faculty, the faculty of sensation has special boundaries and limits tailored to its purpose, inside of which it delivers reliable results and outside of which it doesn't. Accordingly, any judgement made on the basis of sensation which is about some matter that does not pertain to the union of mind and body, but pertains only to mind or pertains only to body, automatically steps outside the boundaries for which sensing has been created. When I make any such judgements I am "subverting the order of nature", I will readily make errors, and it's entirely on my head not on God's. This is what happened in the first two examples above. Neither "What has been done cannot be undone" nor "Physical bodies fall" pertains to the matters for which we possess the faculty of sensation; so sensation will not justify them. When I judge "Flee what brings pain and pursue what causes pain", by contrast, "I use the perception of the senses that properly have been given by nature only for the purpose of signifying to the mind what is agreeable or disagreeable to the composite of which the mind is a part". Then my judgement is true. I can trust whatever sensation tells me about other physical objects than my own body whose character pertains to that special union of mind and body which God has bestowed on me. Special Case Three: sEnsations About Physical Objects Which Impact On Those Arrangements Of My Bodily Parts "As Are Conducive To The Health Of The Union" Are Caused By Those ObjectsThis is mouthful. But the idea is really quite simple. Sometimes I use sensation to make judgements for the purposes for which sensation has been created - about matters pertaining to my union - and I still make errors. For instance, when I am suffering from dropsy I sense that a certain drink is refreshing and I enjoy drinking it, but in fact drinking is exactly the wrong thing for me to be doing. The ideas I passively receive (sense) pertain to the union of my mind and my body. I enjoy the drink (through the faculty of emotion). I judge the liquid refreshes (through the faculty of intellect). But the results are all wrong. How can that be so without making God a deceiver? ("A sickly man is no less a creature of God than a healthy one; for that reason it does not seem any less repugnant [to God being perfect] that the sickly man got a deceiving nature from God".) Descartes' general answer is to argue that the human mind is indivisible (the faculties of intellect and imagination aren't spatially located "parts"), while the human body is divisible (toes and knees and eyeballs are spatially distinct "parts"). The mind is immediately affected only by one of the many parts of the body. This part can be put into the same physical state by any number of arrangements or interruptions to the other parts making up the body. Accordingly, this part can be in the same state, and hence cause the same effect on the indivisible mind, when the other parts of the body are very differently arranged - even abnormally arranged. Think of a piece of rope which has knots tied in it every so often, at points A, B, C, D, E:
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