Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| René Descartes | |
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| Name | René Descartes |
| Caption | Portrait by Frans Hals |
| Birth date | 31 March 1596 |
| Birth place | La Haye en Touraine, Kingdom of France |
| Death date | 11 February 1650 (aged 53) |
| Death place | Stockholm, Swedish Empire |
| Education | University of Poitiers (LL.B., 1616), Collège Royal Henry-Le-Grand |
| Notable works | Discourse on the Method (1637), Meditations on First Philosophy (1641), Principles of Philosophy (1644), The World (published posthumously) |
| Era | 17th-century philosophy |
| Region | Western philosophy |
| School tradition | Rationalism, Cartesianism, Foundationalism |
| Main interests | Metaphysics, epistemology, mathematics, physics, cosmology |
| Influences | Plato, Aristotle, Anselm of Canterbury, Thomas Aquinas, William of Ockham, Francisco Suárez, Marin Mersenne |
| Influenced | Baruch Spinoza, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Nicolas Malebranche, Antoine Arnauld, Blaise Pascal, John Locke, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, Edmund Husserl |
| Notable ideas | Cogito, ergo sum, Method of doubt, Mind–body dualism, Cartesian coordinate system, Foundationalism, Analytic geometry, Cartesian circle |
René Descartes was a seminal French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist whose work fundamentally shaped the Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution. Often called the father of modern philosophy, he established a rigorous method of inquiry based on reason and skepticism, famously encapsulated in the dictum "I think, therefore I am." His groundbreaking contributions span metaphysics, epistemology, physics, and mathematics, including the invention of analytic geometry, which bridged algebra and geometry.
Born in La Haye en Touraine, he was educated at the Jesuit Collège Royal Henry-Le-Grand in La Flèche, where he studied a traditional curriculum of classical literature, logic, and Aristotelian philosophy. He later earned a law degree from the University of Poitiers in 1616. Seeking broader experience, he traveled extensively across Europe, served in the Dutch States Army under Maurice of Nassau, and spent significant time in the Dutch Republic, where he produced his most important works. His final years were spent at the court of Queen Christina in Stockholm, where he died in 1650, possibly from pneumonia.
Descartes sought to establish a secure foundation for knowledge through his method of doubt, systematically questioning all beliefs susceptible to error, as detailed in his Meditations on First Philosophy. This radical skepticism led him to the indubitable certainty of his own existence as a thinking thing, the famous cogito, ergo sum. He argued for a rigorous dualism between the immaterial mind (res cogitans) and the extended body (res extensa), a position that created the enduring mind–body problem. His proofs for the existence of God, relying on concepts of perfection and causality, were central to his system, though they were later critiqued by philosophers like Baruch Spinoza and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
In natural philosophy, Descartes proposed a comprehensive mechanical model of the universe, rejecting scholastic teleology in favor of corpuscularianism and the laws of motion. His work The World, withheld after the condemnation of Galileo, described a heliocentric vortex theory of planetary motion. He made significant studies in optics, formulating the law of refraction (independently of Willebrord Snellius) and investigating the rainbow. His physiological theories, explored in works like Treatise on Man, described the body as an automaton, with the pineal gland as the point of interaction between mind and matter.
Descartes revolutionized mathematics by inventing analytic geometry, detailed in his La Géométrie, an appendix to the Discourse on the Method. This work introduced the use of coordinate systems, allowing geometric curves to be expressed with algebraic equations and vice versa. He established the convention of using letters from the beginning of the Latin alphabet for known quantities and letters from the end for unknowns, a notation still standard today. His work laid essential groundwork for the later development of calculus by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
Descartes' thought inaugurated modern philosophy and deeply influenced subsequent movements, including rationalism, empiricism, and Kantian critical philosophy. His dualism shaped debates in the philosophy of mind for centuries, engaging thinkers from Thomas Hobbes and Antoine Arnauld to modern cognitive science. The Cartesian method of analysis became a model for the Scientific Revolution, impacting figures like Christiaan Huygens and Blaise Pascal. Institutions like the French Academy of Sciences and universities worldwide continue to study his work, while his emphasis on individual reason remains a cornerstone of Western intellectual history.
Category:1596 births Category:1650 deaths Category:French philosophers Category:French mathematicians Category:Modern philosophers