Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Cecilia Bembibre, in Mar. 2012
The term 'Cartesian' is used as an adjective to refer to everything that has to do with the diverse and very complex philosophical theories and of thought proposed by one of the greatest French philosophers in history: René Descartes. Descartes is considered by many specialists in the area as one of the first philosophers who postulated the importance of the use reason in the sciences, especially with regard to the different methods of verification and verification of the truth. Thus, its importance lies in the fact that long before the great revolutionary ideas arose about the importance of reason over reason. religion (those that at the end of the 18th century put an end to Old Regime), Descartes had raised the most basic idea but at the same time most important of all: the human being is such only through reason.
The theory Cartesian or proposed by Descartes part of a inference very simple but so deep and meaningful that it could be understood as the very center of human existence. This inference became extremely famous from the phrase "I think, therefore I am" which means neither more nor less than consciously realizing its activity
mentalFrom his thought, the human being then understands that he exists. That thought is what assures him that he is alive, that he exists in the world, and that is an indisputable truth because any human being who does not think will not exist.From this Cartesian base, science began to formulate work systems that are based on the use of reason over reason. justification religious reality. Although Descartes was not the first to raise such information, he was one of the first to clarify the fact that only through The reason (and that it is being carried out by some thinking being) is that it is possible to know the truth of reality, either for the physical, for the biology, for history, for any science. Descartes divided reality into three worlds: that of mind, that of matter, and that inhabited by God. Despite being a devout Catholic, Descartes proposed the preeminence of the first world as the basis for finding truth on a scientific level.
Themes in Cartesian