What is it about?

The paper examines the role of self-deception in Descartes' Meditations. It claims that although Descartes sees self-deception as the origin of our false judgments, he consciously uses it for his searching for truth. Descartes finds that self-deception is a very productive tool in our searching for truth, since it expands our ability to free ourselves from our old certainties; logical thinking enables us to doubt our certainties but only self-deception enables us to really suspend them. Descartes, then, proposes a logical-psychological method in first person for philosophical investigation, in which self-deception plays a crucial role. The Cogito should be understood accordingly as a first psychological truth rather than a first philosophical truth. Nevertheless, it is a crucial step in Descartes' philosophical investigation and exposes the relations between the logical aspect and the psychological aspect of philosophical thinking.

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Why is it important?

The work explores the psychological aspect of Descartes' philosophical method in the "Meditations", and espeically his use of self-deception.

Perspectives

It is the first paper in a project of self-deception in philosophy.

Professor shaif Frogel
Kibbutzim College of Education

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This page is a summary of: Descartes: Truth and Self-deception, Philosophy, July 2015, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s0031819115000443.
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