Difference between revisions of "Quotations on DTOI"
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: '''Lex Newman:''' "Descartes's transformation of the notion of ideas deeply influenced subsequent thinking about their nature and epistemic significance in philosophical inquiry." (Ch. 7 "Theories of Ideas" in [http://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Routledge_Companion_to_Seventeenth_C/j3s5DwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&printsec=frontcover ''The Routledge Companion to Seventeenth Century Philosophy'',] edited by Dan Kaufman, 195–223. New York: Routledge, 2018.) | : '''Lex Newman:''' "Descartes's transformation of the notion of ideas deeply influenced subsequent thinking about their nature and epistemic significance in philosophical inquiry." (Ch. 7 "Theories of Ideas" in [http://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Routledge_Companion_to_Seventeenth_C/j3s5DwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&printsec=frontcover ''The Routledge Companion to Seventeenth Century Philosophy'',] edited by Dan Kaufman, 195–223. New York: Routledge, 2018.) | ||
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+ | : '''Georges Dicker:''' "However, unlike Aquinas’s arguments, Descartes’s proofs cannot appeal to any of God’s effects in the physical world; for remem-ber that at this point in the Meditations, the existence of the entire physical world is still in doubt. Accordingly, Descartes’s strategy is to argue from the idea | ||
+ | of God that he finds in his mind to God as the cause of that idea." (Georges Dicker, ''Descartes: An Historical and Analytical Introduction'', 2013) |
Revision as of 05:05, 7 February 2024
Quotations on DTOI
- Lex Newman: "Descartes's transformation of the notion of ideas deeply influenced subsequent thinking about their nature and epistemic significance in philosophical inquiry." (Ch. 7 "Theories of Ideas" in The Routledge Companion to Seventeenth Century Philosophy, edited by Dan Kaufman, 195–223. New York: Routledge, 2018.)
- Georges Dicker: "However, unlike Aquinas’s arguments, Descartes’s proofs cannot appeal to any of God’s effects in the physical world; for remem-ber that at this point in the Meditations, the existence of the entire physical world is still in doubt. Accordingly, Descartes’s strategy is to argue from the idea