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Descartes Embodied: Reading Cartesian Philosophy through Cartesian Science

Descartes Embodied: Reading Cartesian Philosophy through Cartesian Science

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Daniel Garber
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 4/23/2010
EAN 9780521789738, ISBN10: 0521789737

Paperback, 352 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.2 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

This volume collects some of the seminal essays on Descartes by Daniel Garber, one of the pre-eminent scholars of early-modern philosophy. A central theme unifying the volume is the interconnection between Descartes' philosophical and scientific interests, and the extent to which these two sides of the Cartesian program illuminate each other, a question rarely treated in the existing literature. Amongst the specific topics discussed in the essays are Descartes' celebrated method, his demand for certainty in the sciences, his account of the relation of mind and body, and his conception of God's activity on the physical world. This collection will be a mandatory purchase for any serious student of or professional working in seventeenth-century philosophy, history of science, or history of ideas.

Introduction
Part I. Historiographical Preliminaries
1. Does history have a future? Some reflections on Bennett and doing philosophy historically
Part II. Method, Order and Certainty
2. Descartes and method in 1637
3. A point of order
analysis, synthesis, and Descartes's Principles
4. J. B. Morin and the Second Objections
5. Descartes and experiment in the Discourse and Essays
6. Descartes on knowledge and certainty
Part III. Mind, Body, and the Laws of Nature
7. Mind, body, and the laws of nature in Descartes and Leibniz
8. Understanding interaction
what Descartes should have told Elizabeth
9. How God causes motion
Descartes, divine sustenance, and occasionalism
10. Descartes and occasionalism
11. Semel in Vita
the scientific background to Descartes meditations
12. Forms and qualities in the Sixth Replies
Part IV. Larger Visions
13. Descartes, or the cultivation of the intellect
14. Experiment, community, and the constitution of nature in the seventeenth century.