Analysis Of Rene Descartes And The Evil Demon Argument

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To eliminate all foundation in which false knowledge and judgement was built on, Rene Descartes believed that he must doubt the existence of everything and refute all he once held true. To prove his own existence and find a new foundation to build his knowledge from scratch. Descartes provides two very convincing arguments in the First Meditation, the Dream argument, and the Evil Demon argument. Although Descartes makes strong points, he counteracts his own arguments in the First Meditation as he assumes existence based on the ability to think. By doing so, he added the premise of knowledge. The same knowledge that he deemed false and is attempting to disprove.
Explanation
Descartes acknowledges that when he is dreaming, his senses deceive …show more content…

Descartes makes the Evil Demon argument to neither prove the existence of such a demon or construct a better understanding of this source of deceit. But rather to destroy the foundations in which he has built all his bias on and rebuild his knowledge from scratch. It works to make us speculate everything while doubting the beliefs and senses we hold so true. This never-ending doubt gives rise to a new question, how do I know that I even …show more content…

With an understanding of distinct existences, Descartes is thus able to argue the existence of himself as a thinking being as well as his body being a separate, non-thinking extension (Descartes 167).” Even with the high degree of doubt and uncertainty involved here, the very fact that God is not a deceiver [and] if nature is considered in its general aspect, then I understand by the term nothing other than God. And by my own nature in particular I understand nothing more than the totality of things bestowed on me by God” (Descartes 168). At this point Descartes has built his foundation on the belief of God’s goodness in order to resolve the counterarguments he encountered in his First

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