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Cartesian scientific paradigm. Tutorial
Pavel Minakov

Vadim Shmal

Sergey Pavlov


Vadim Shmal Ph. D. Associate ProfessorRUSSIAN UNIVERSITY OF TRANSPORT (MIIT)Pavel Minakov Ph. D. Associate ProfessorRUSSIAN UNIVERSITY OF TRANSPORT (MIIT)Sergey Pavlov MasterPLEKHANOV RUSSIAN UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS





Cartesian scientific paradigm

Tutorial



Sergey Pavlov

Vadim Shmal

Pavel Minakov



Sergey Pavlov,2021

Vadim Shmal,2021

Pavel Minakov,2021



ISBN978-5-0055-6696-6

Ridero




Introduction


One ofthe reasons Descartes is called the father ofmodern philosophy is because he set the agenda for those philosophers who came after him. Over the centuries, many thinkers have tried tointerpret Descartes methods for their own purposes. This influence continues today.

Some philosophical problems will be familiar topeople say, the problem ofknowledge or the problem offree will. The key question, however, is how topresent these problems inaradically different way from Descartess inorder toaccommodate aphilosophy ofsubjectivity that goes beyond the traditional concept ofman as athing that can be known.

Much has been written about the problem ofDescartes knowledge. But more is needed toexplain the role ofsubjectivity inDescartes thinking and how it influenced later philosophers. But Ifeel that this will become even more important inthe future as the scale ofthe relationship between humans and the natural world will expand. Today we are experiencing arevolution inour understanding ofthe relationship between humans and the environment.

Among other things, this revolution is based on the discovery that the natural world (which Descartes considered astatic environment, shaped byGod) is infact adynamic, changing inan increasingly complex way. From wildfires and the rise ofagriculture tothe introduction ofagriculture into livestock and human industries, we are constantly changing the environment incountless ways.

Descartes model ofthe natural world implies that we are trapped inpredetermined deterministic rules ofthe natural world. Today, many people believe that they have escaped from this control, and can chart their own course inthe world, guided byreasons, feelings and memory.

Descartes views on the subjectivity ofreason guided philosophers who tried tofind the meaning offreedom. Spinoza argued that we are free toact, because reason compels us todo so. If we can do this, we are free. But Spinoza also said that since reason is the vehicle offree will, free will has anatural source or at least asource that we can turn to. And Descartes own opinion that the feeling Iam or what inHegels philosophy is called withdrawal is essential for this understanding offreedom.

Thus, Descartess views on the subjectivity ofreason inspired awide range ofthinkers. But they were also taken quite differently byphilosophers who continue tohold Descartes views ofman as athing that can be known. One ofthem, the philosopher Abraham Kuyper, argued that the sensible existence ofaperson is just acase ofhis awareness, conceived inhis own consciousness, that he exists existentially. Inother words, my being has acertain meaning, and Iam happy toknow that.

Infact, Kuyper believed that knowing that Iexistentially exist was critical tomy freedom and toall other people because knowing my existence prompts me toact. According tohis version ofDescartes, the world is fixed and given; Ido not just exist, but Ican think and act freely. Ido not just exist, but Iknow my existence and free will.

Thus, the description ofthe world as afixed and given subjectivity is at the heart ofKuypers philosophy. He himself would call his philosophy idealistic realism (also called subjectivism).

But although Descartes has always been unpopular inphilosophy, he enjoyed some support from other thinkers, inparticular Immanuel Kant, who actually wrote acommentary on Descartess thinking. Kants commentary, however, does not address the philosophical problems posed byDescartes philosophy. Rather, he argues that what Descartes saw as" cogito ergo sum" was not something that the philosopher had toconvince himself ofas much as he had toconvince the world ofthe validity ofhis ideas. Thus, according toDescartes ' axiom, the philosopher does not rule the world and does not question it. For the world rules him.

The philosophy ofDescartes is aphilosophy that is sometimes called Cartesianism, Cartesian dualism, or Cartesian philosophy. As Rene Descartes put it, the main direction ofCartesian philosophy is the understanding and use ofreason as asource ofknowledge, understanding ofnatural law and the practice ofthe scientific method, which, showing the power ofthe mind, seeks togain true knowledge. He considered himself the first true philosopher and the first true scientist. His famous physics is rooted inmedieval Arab philosophies ofthe corpuscular method and their distinction between mathematics (which is limited tounderstanding the natural order) and physics (which is unsystematic and therefore capable ofpredicting the behavior ofthe world around us), and the theory ofconservation ofenergy. His analysis ofthe mind and the nature ofthe mind, as well as the direct analysis ofthe mind bythe mind, are central toDescartes philosophy. Descartes developed atheory ofideas, which he called the commotive ofideas. His philosophy is thus often considered acorpuscular version ofthe Irish philosopher John Buridan ofthe tradition ofatomism and Platos philosophy ofmind.

Descartes philosophy was well known bythe 18th century and was used primarily bythe founders ofthe scientific revolution. Georges Lemaitre used Descartes debate method inhis study ofwave mechanics. Joseph Butler strongly criticized Cartesianism and stated that Descartes was forced toconclude that the mind is simply amaterial function ofthe brain and body, and argued that Descartes had no legal basis todeny the existence ofspirits because many ofthe great writers ofthe Catholic Church have argued. However, the classical concept ofDescartes as aproto-scientist was discredited byImmanuel Kant, aGerman philosopher who worked with clearly anti-Cartesian views.

Descartes philosophy focused on the concept ofdualism, and his goal was toarrive at an explanation ofthe nature ofmind and how it works. It was based on the idea ofdualism, the distinction between physical and mental, or between mind and body, as opposed toaconsistent monistic science. Inthe second meditation, Descartes argues that when people discuss something with another person, the way they speak and move is determined bythe body, whereas the mind is associated with thoughts. InMeditation Three, Descartes discusses the purpose ofthe mind, claiming that it is an impartial observer who collects and displays information.

Descartes suggested that the mind has the following characteristics:

the soul (consciousness) is divided into two parts: the intellect (besides the higher thought) and the body;

mind and body are separate but not different;

the mind has atwofold power: reasoning and perception;

there is one mind (mind and soul), but two bodies, one ofwhich is immaterial;

the mind can imagine amaterial body and use it as if it were its own, but cannot cause it toappear;

mind and body are separate and yet indistinguishable from each other, so the mind does not belong tothe body, and yet the body does not belong tothe mind.

Descartes further argued that when people imagine the body, they represent it interms ofits materiality (it has bones and flesh). When they imagine mind, they consider it intangible. Therefore, the mind, says Descartes, should be considered as possessing the same qualities ofthought and perception as the material body, and the mind and the material body were created bypeople, since they were created byGod. Descartes also argues that mind and body can be detached and then put back together. This idea, known as dualism, was later taken up bylater philosophical systems such as determinism and materialism.

Descartes also believes that each part ofthe mind has its own existence and its own nature. For this reason, he opposed pantheism and called the one indivisible God mind. Descartes believed that the mind is not amaterial substance like abody, but, on the contrary, the possibility ofrealization.

Descartess views were based on the writings ofhis predecessor, Scotus Eriugena, but also required alot ofresearch on the part ofDescartes. His decision tolimit his research tothe psychic life led tothe development ofCartesianism. Toexplain reason, Descartes developed aset ofrequirements for incompatibility between mind and matter (rational thinking and concrete objects). The basis for this disagreement is that Descartes and some ofhis predecessors considered matter tobe auniversal substance, while others thought that mind was auniversal substance.




Intelligence


Descartes believed that what people experience is based on what is happening intheir brain. He believed that when people think something, the thought moves through the nerves and muscles ofthe head until it reaches the conscious mind. For this reason, he believed that there is amind and abody, and that each ofthem has its own existence, since he believed that the soul is both material and immaterial. As aresult, the concept ofdualism plays avital role inhis thinking, and he argued that matter is the only substance, while matter and spirit are separate and not completely complementary. Inthe Third Meditation, Descartes describes how if someone looks at their hand and thinks it is ahand, then they perceive the subjective impression ofthe hand. This led him tobelieve that mind and body are not one but two parts ofthe mind, so that the mind cannot cause the body toappear, but the body can cause the mind toappear. Descartes believed that the ability ofthe body tocause the emergence ofmind is the basis ofthe idea offree will. Descartes wrote that he still believed infree will. Descartes argued that the mind can determine the will. And this decision todo something is made freely, because the mind inits logical and systematic procedure generates alogical conclusion based on the premises ofthe situation. Descartes wrote that the mind has the power tomake will because ofits ability togenerate alogical conclusion based on the facts ofthe present. The ability toform awill depends on intelligence and reason. The mind determines what it considers tobe good reasons for decisions. Moreover, the mind can distinguish between different criteria and is not able tomake decisions based only on knowledge. Descartes reflections on free will have been quoted inthe debate on libertarianism.

According tomany readers ofhis work, Descartes adhered toAristotelian epistemology. He viewed the mind as aform ofthinking inwhich physical objects are different, mental qualities are either definite or indefinite, and what seems real is necessarily related towhat is possible. Descartes suggested that the object is aseparate body, consisting ofatoms ofan undefined nature. Descartes rejected the monistic doctrine that mind and body are one because, inhis opinion, two bodies without mind were not enough toexplain the relationship between two people.

Descartes also believed that all entities, whether physical, mental, or both, are bound bydefinite and implacable laws. He believed that no entity is completely independent, because the mind is not immune from the laws ofthe world. Body and mind are inseparable. Descartes believed that one can become aware ofsomething that is not aware ofitself. He suggested that one day the conscious mind will become aware ofits true nature.

Without direct access toother minds, we must, based on the behavior ofothers, conclude that their personal mental life is similar toours. This conclusion became akind ofepistemic reflex. According tothe philosopher John Searle, this has led toone ofthe most enduring beliefs inmodern intellectual life: after all, we are not limited inour consciousness only byourselves. This may not be the case. We have minds that are capable ofperforming truly intelligent reasoning and seeing things intruly mysterious ways, and they are probably superior toour own, and they too can be used tounderstand and improve our lives. They may not be as effective as we are. The only reasonable position on this issue is that our minds are as smart as possible, and insome ways better.

Take intelligence, for example. The fact that we, byand large, have minds equal ingeneral capacity toour own is clearly not agood sign that these minds are similar enough toours that we can have similar experiences or understand each other. As Searle put it, Tosay that we are essentially the same animal inacertain respect means nothing at all. He has asimple answer tothe seemingly outrageous assertion that we can know ourselves inrelation toanother human being, namely: As for the assertion that we can know one human being inrelation toanother human being, Im quite prepared tosay, that such knowledge is absolutely useless.

You may not find this point ofview entirely clear, but it is nonetheless an important finding, even if Searle is toqualify it with the remark that he is willing todiscard it on the grounds that, being similar enough, really useless, that is, it actually does not contribute tothe accumulation ofknowledge. You and Imay be perfectly capable ofdoing intelligent things such as reading or listening, or making decisions on difficult, vague, and potentially conflicting issues, but our special abilities can never justify us, even inrelation tosomeone who, intheir queue, as smart as we are. Anyone who wants toclaim that we are really equal or are the same animals, after long and persistent reflection, had tocome tothe conclusion that our minds are radically different and simply fundamentally incomparable.

But here another interesting question arises. It would be easy toview this differentiation as proof that the human mind has abilities that we do not share with any animal. But Searle sees that is not the point.

It may seem that Ihave alittle roughly characterized Searl s position as aposition that is inthe spirit ofutilitarianism, as adetermination tomaximize the overall well-being ofhumanity. But he truly believes that this sane maxim should guide the thinking ofeveryone involved inaproject toimprove the well-being ofpeople, from the highest courts toordinary citizens, with the goal ofbuilding afuture that will be as rich and interesting as the one we can imagine now. According tohim, all those who followed Searles example and supported the project oftheorizing about collective unconscious and symbolic thinking were forced todo so because they are convinced that they are looking for ways toexpand human power. But it also means that they have tobe willing tosay no tocertain things when they are faced with the opportunity tomake humans more and more superior toother animals. It is an area ofresearch that, he says, is not related tothe question ofwhether we are better than other animals, but rather tohow we should avoid all possible threats toour own growth and the growth ofour offspring, including threats our intellectual achievements.

Indeed, as Searle has often pointed out, there is not asingle animal that knows why it exists. And we, who truly know why we exist, he argues, must pay the price for being so smart and capable. He says we should not allow ourselves tofall inlove with our powers and our tendency toregard our minds as unique. We must remember that what sets us apart from other animals is simply our mind.

Discussing man as arational animal, Descartes said: Arational animal does not inany way correspond tothe conditions ofman, since it is as superior and independent ofhim as his imagination is independent ofhim. Descartes considered the mind above the body and insuch away that it could exist without the body, although he did not want tomake aspecific distinction between mind and soul, as well as mind and body. InDiscourse on Method, Descartes gave an example ofsuch away ofthinking. He argued that the process ofcreating an object is essentially the same for creating an object inthe mind and creating inthe physical world. Descartes said that we should not think ofthe mind as aseparate substance, as Plato would like us todo, but we should not attribute tothe mind the ability tocreate the physical world. The essence ofthis great whole, so far from being something absolute, is infact amultitude ofdifferent things connected together bythe smallest connections, but united bymany small differences.

We should be divided into mind and body, but Descartes wanted tostick tothe idea that the body is not aphysical substance, as materialism claimed. We can think ofthe mind as an intelligent being or thinking object and consider that the mind has no material substance. We can consider that the mind is superior tothe body inits capabilities. However, the mind has amaterial part ofits reality. Descartes discussed the fact that although we are inastate ofcontemplation, nevertheless, infact, we are inastate ofbodily existence, but he made it clear that all the organs ofthe body are still there and move inaccordance with immutability. the nature ofthe mind or soul. Thus, the body does not cease toexist, and we can think ofthe mind as created from the body, which inasense is. Descartes said: The soul is not the only thing, but it is asubstance that has intelligent powers that make up the body, which, again, is the soul.

Toachieve his rational goal, Descartes rejected materialism. This meant that Descartes rejected both the idea that the body is amaterial substance and that the mind is separate from the body. Descartes understood materialism as the point ofview according towhich the body is amaterial substance, that the mind is different from the body and that the body has nothing todo with the mind. Descartes believed that inasense, the mind is not aseparate substance, but asubstance that exists inthe body. Tosay that the body is material, Descartes believed, means tosay that the mind is not arational thing, but athing that can be controlled with the help ofthe body. Inother words, the mind is arational entity that can be viewed as separate from the body. Inhis Treatise on Method, Descartes said: One thing cannot think ofanother thing independently. Descartes considered reason as one substance, rational. Descartes argued that if mind were aseparate substance, then we could create ideas about other things and things other than mind. This would be impossible for the mind, because the mind is essentially abody. It is necessary that the mind, as the rational faculty ofthe body, belong tothe body; that it, and not the body, was the substance ofthe mind; that it is amaterial part ofthe body; and that he should be apart ofthe body, like that part ofthe body that consists ofrational faculties.

As Imentioned earlier, Descartes did not adhere tothe idea that the mind is aseparate substance from the body. This is adecisive moment inDescartes understanding. When he discussed mind and body, he insisted that there was adifference between the two. He believed that the mind is arational thing, but inseparable from the body. Rather, the body is an effective cause, atool that the mind uses toachieve its goal. The relationship ofthings toeach other is always determined bythe nature ofthings. It is intelligence toproduce what is inthe mind, what makes them change, what makes them exist. Mind and body are intelligent things, but not separate substances. Descartes believed that although we can think ofmind and body as if they were separate substances, mind is the effective cause ofthe body. The mind is the inner force that exists inthe body and through which it is built. An essential part ofDescartes understanding ofmind is that mind and body are not separate substances. This is not tosay that mind and body are separate substances. They are one and the same substance. Inasense, the body is simply atool that is used tohelp the mind achieve its goal.

These are words that we know come from the Latin verb rerum (asire inEnglish). Feelings alone, and also only imagination, will not do anything, neither see, nor hear, nor think, but must be connected together with the intellect (lat. Intellectus), and they will be ready toproduce sensation. For example, if you want tofind out whether there are two things or not, you have toreason todo so: the mind, which is ofthe same nature as the imagination, will cause the sensation ofthe existence oftwo things; because areason alone, if you set it up toconjure up asensation, will cause both sensation and doubt; but doubt alone has its own nature. The difference between existing and non-existent things is this: every thing that exists has acause, and every thing that does not exist has no reason. Therefore, there is areason for everything that exists, and there is no reason for everything that does not exist. So, this reason has existed from eternity; for each cause, it is already present and remains after aseries ofthings: for example, those things that were caused come totheir end and die. Therefore, this cause ofthings exists from eternity, and this cause ofthings does not exist only from time.

Inthe second part ofthe Treatise on Man, Descartes develops the concept ofreason, which combines reason, imagination and thought. This is the first attempt bymodern philosophy todevelop atheory ofmind, because, inaddition tobelieving inwhat is believed tobe true, the object must also judge whether it possesses that property. Descartes theory does not attempt tocreate an object called the comprehensible world that does not depend on the mind that perceives it, but rather represents the minds perception ofthe transcendental mind.

Inhis earlier Reflections books, Descartes addressed epistemological questions about what knowledge is and how we acquire it, and how knowledge about external objects can be obtained. Inthe third book, he presents the idea ofan inner mind (intelligible world) for solving the problem ofcognition inthe physical world. As he notes: So, if Iknow this, Imust also know that Ido not know it; and if Iknow that Ido not know this, Imust know that Iknowit.

His solution tothe problem ofepistemological knowledge is that mind exists somewhere, which is itself ajudgment, and that mind itself is asingle judgment. This is the mind, and the mind is the domain ofknowledge. Descartes theory ofmind as the mind behind the world is tosome extent acomplete interpretation ofthe mind behind the world ofPythagoras, but Descartess theory is still sufficiently related tothe idea ofPythagoras toqualify as aform ofmind dualism and body. The story ofhow we can find out what is inthe mind ofthe world inReflections can be seen as acontinuation ofthis.

Descartes begins the fourth book with the argument that, although the world seems absolutely solid, the principles governing all the complex phenomena that we perceive around us are not rigidly fixed. They are constantly being modified or transformed. As Descartes says inhis article An Essay on Human Understanding, the sun seems tomove across the sky because the changes that occur inthe fixed world that we perceive ingeneral includes the movements ofthe planets and stars, and what he could describe these changes, as acontinuous movement, would mean that the underlying substance is subject toconstant change, and therefore is not absolute. Instead, the only substance that is not subject toconstant change is the mind that we have about ourselves, the mind that is material. This mind is an understandable world, but not everything is clear, and those things that are incomprehensible are called beings or active principle. The idea that mind or some other immaterial, non-causal principle should be responsible for the world that we perceive around us has been called metaphysical materialism or materialism from within.

Descartes argues that we perceive objects not only as existing inthe world inany objective sense, but also subjectively. This is because we are, infact, attentive tothe imaginary mind within us, which is separate from the visible world. Lets take an example: when we eat something, our real sense oftaste causes us toattribute the taste ofthe object not toit, but toour imagination. We actually see the object and sense the taste associated with it, so that we not only taste the taste, but also imagine that we are tasting it. Inthe dualism ofthe spirit and body ofDescartes, the mind is the same as the real world as awhole, but the world is not identical tothe mind as awhole. According toDescartes, we know what we are thinking, because it is through thinking that our sensations are transmitted through the body system tothe tongue and the gut. We are no longer looking for the whole object, but our body as awhole. The perceived thing is the inner, system ofideas, how they appear inour mind and how they are experienced byour senses. Descartes thinks ofthe sensory impression ofan object as representing that object as representing that perception.

Descartes belief inmaterialism is simply abelief, and he admits that we do not know how our own consciousness can explain the comprehensible world, especially when it is connected with us insuch away that the material cannot be part ofour mind. But tothink that we can explain the world using an intangible cause is incompatible with our human experience, so Descartes assumes that there is amaterial cause. This is what he calls the non-material cause. According toDescartes, it is the cause ofthe movement ofthe sun, or the cause ofadream, or the cause ofthe invention ofsomething, the cause ofthe universe.

Yet one ofthe most surprising features ofDescartes ideas is that the material cause does not seem tohave any reason at all, that the purpose ofthe universe is for the world tobe as it is, without any external cause. Descartes does not provide any explanation for how the material cause arises inthe first place, and he does not provide any explanation as towhy the material cause must cause the non-material cause. However, as Isuggested, what seems tobe asimple axiom there is no external cause, is very difficult toestablish inthe materialist worldview. Most philosophers at least claim that we do not know how amaterial cause arises. But from the point ofview ofthe materialistic worldview, no one can know whether amaterial cause arises insome primitive mechanism, or as aproperty ofthe universe, or as something that would arise if there were nothing but material, or as aresult ofaprocess, natural selection, or from an unthinking source such as spontaneous generation. There are many different possible answers tothese questions, and they may all be correct, but we can never know for sure what the material causeis.

Consciousness and intelligence are very important concepts inour scientific understanding ofthe world. It is the main characteristic ofthe mind that it arises from consciousness. So we can see how ascientific understanding ofthe mind explains what it feels like toexperienceit.

However, consciousness and mind are not the same thing. They are not just different levels ofthe same thing. Consciousness is an experience ofthe mind, and it does not exist outside the mind. Scientifically, this is perfectly reasonable, because there is nothing inthe physical world that can experience anything external toitself. Ofcourse, this is not that easy, because there are many things that the physical world can experience, and inparticular, the physical brain can experience things that are not physical at all. Inthe context ofconsciousness and mind, things like thoughts, beliefs, intentions, etc., are not just mental states. These are mental states that the physical brain experiences.

There is astriking contradiction between how the scientific understanding ofconsciousness relates tothe nature ofmind. Indeed, the scientific understanding ofthe mind gives us only limited information about how the mind can arise from the material world.

The mind and the material world arise incomplex causal relationships. For one toarise from the other, they must causally influence each other. The mechanisms that cause the mind toemerge from the material world involve extremely complex processes that include many physical and mental properties and cannot be directly observed. As aresult, the mind and the material world are not independent, and if the material world were not present, there would be no consciousness either.

There are some things that are important tothe mind. Descartes identified several functions that, inhis opinion, can be described as afunction ofthe mind. These functions are the ability toinduce change, retain inmemory, combine disparate thoughts, and use the body toperform specific functions. These are the general functions ofthe mind. But Cartesian thought allowed much more. He admitted the possibility ofabroader understanding ofthe possibilities.




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Vadim Shmal Ph. D. Associate Professor RUSSIAN UNIVERSITY OF TRANSPORT (MIIT) Pavel Minakov Ph. D. Associate Professor RUSSIAN UNIVERSITY OF TRANSPORT (MIIT) Sergey Pavlov Master PLEKHANOV RUSSIAN UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS

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