René Descartes
Philosopher and mathematician René Descartes is regarded as the father of modern philosophy for defining a starting point for existence, “I think; therefore I am.” ("Cogito ergo sum.")”
Synopsis
René Descartes was born on March
31, 1596, in La Haye en Touraine, France. He was extensively educated, first at
a Jesuit college at age 8, then earning a law degree at 22, but an influential
teacher set him on a course to apply mathematics and logic to understanding the
natural world. This approach incorporated the contemplation of the nature of
existence and of knowledge itself, hence his most famous observation, “I think;
therefore I am.”
Early Life
Philosopher René Descartes was born
on March 31, 1596, in La Haye en Touraine, a small town in central France,
which has since been renamed after him to honor its most famous son. He was the
youngest of three children, and his mother, Jeanne Brochard, died within his
first year of life. His father, Joachim, a council member in the provincial
parliament, sent the children to live with their maternal grandmother, where
they remained even after he remarried a few years later. But he was very
concerned with good education and sent René, at age 8, to boarding school at
the Jesuit college of Henri IV in La Flèche, several miles to the north, for
seven years.
Descartes was a good student,
although it is thought that he might have been sickly, since he didn’t have to
abide by the school’s rigorous schedule and was instead allowed to rest in bed
until midmorning. The subjects he studied, such as rhetoric and logic and the
“mathematical arts,” which included music and astronomy, as well as
metaphysics, natural philosophy and ethics, equipped him well for his future as
a philosopher. So did spending the next four years earning a baccalaureate in
law at the University of Poitiers. Some scholars speculate that he may have had
a nervous breakdown during this time.
Descartes later added theology and
medicine to his studies. But he eschewed all this, “resolving to seek no
knowledge other than that of which could be found in myself or else in the
great book of the world,” he wrote much later in Discourse
on the Method of Rightly Conducting the Reason and Seeking Truth in the Sciences,
published in 1637.
So he traveled, joined the army for
a brief time, saw some battles and was introduced to Dutch scientist and
philosopher Isaac Beeckman, who would become for Descartes a very influential
teacher. A year after graduating from Poitiers, Descartes credited a series of
three very powerful dreams or visions with determining the course of his study
for the rest of his life.
Descartes is considered by many to be the
father of modern philosophy, because his ideas departed widely from current
understanding in the early 17th century, which was more feeling-based. While
elements of his philosophy weren’t completely new, his approach to them was.
Descartes believed in basically clearing everything off the table, all
preconceived and inherited notions, and starting fresh, putting back one by one
the things that were certain, which for him began with the statement “I exist.”
From this sprang his most famous quote: “I think; therefore I am.”
Since Descartes believed that all truths were
ultimately linked, he sought to uncover the meaning of the natural world with a
rational approach, through science and mathematics—in some ways an extension of
the approach Sir Francis Bacon had asserted in England a few decades prior. In
addition to Discourse on the Method, Descartes
also published Meditations on First Philosophy and Principles
of Philosophy, among other treatises.
Although philosophy is largely where the 20th
century deposited Descartes—each century has focused on different aspects of
his work—his investigations in theoretical physics led many scholars to
consider him a mathematician first. He introduced Cartesian geometry, which
incorporates algebra; through his laws of refraction, he developed an empirical
understanding of rainbows; and he proposed a naturalistic account of the
formation of the solar system, although he felt he had to suppress much of that
due to Galileo’s fate at the hands of the Inquisition. His concern wasn’t
misplaced—Pope Alexander VII later added Descartes’ works to the Index of
Prohibited Books.
Descartes never married, but he did have a
daughter, Francine, born in the Netherlands in 1635. He had moved to that
country in 1628 because life in France was too bustling for him to concentrate
on his work, and Francine’s mother was a maid in the home where he was staying.
He had planned to have the little girl educated in France, having arranged for
her to live with relatives, but she died of a fever at age 5.
Descartes lived in the Netherlands for more
than 20 years but died in Stockholm, Sweden, on February 11, 1650. He had moved
there less than a year before, at the request of Queen Christina, to be her
philosophy tutor. The fragile health indicated in his early life persisted. He
habitually spent mornings in bed, where he continued to honor his dream life,
incorporating it into his waking methodologies in conscious meditation, but the
queen’s insistence on 5 am lessons led to a bout of pneumonia from which he
could not recover. He was 53.
Sweden was a Protestant country, so Descartes,
a Catholic, was buried in a graveyard primarily for unbaptized babies. Later,
his remains were taken to the abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, the oldest
church in Paris. They were moved during the French Revolution, and were put
back later—although urban legend has it that only his heart is there and the
rest is buried in the Panthéon.
Descartes’
approach of combining mathematics and logic with philosophy to explain the
physical world turned metaphysical when confronted with questions of theology;
it led him to a contemplation of the nature of existence and the mind-body
duality, identifying the point of contact for the body with the soul at the
pineal gland. It also led him to define the idea of dualism: matter meeting
non-matter. Because his previous philosophical system had given man the tools
to define knowledge of what is true, this concept led to controversy.
Fortunately, Descartes himself had also invented methodological skepticism, or
Cartesian doubt, thus making philosophers of us all.

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