Filozofija i drustvo 2011 Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages: 235-266
https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1103235M
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Descartes’ idea and the representations of things
Milidrag Predrag (Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju, Beograd)
On the basis of the analysis of relevant passages from Descartes’ writings,
the article shows that Descartes’ ideas represent things in mind, but that he
is not a representationalist in a Malebranchean sense: in Descartes,
represented object is perceived, not the very representation of that object.
Hereafter, three senses of idea in Descartes were analyzed, objective, formal
and material, as well as the notions conceptus formalis and conceptus
objectivus of Francisco Suárez who is direct historical source of Descartes’
theory of ideas. In the conclusion the centrality of the notion of idea in
formal sense in Descartes’ theory of ideas is shown, and it is claimed that
the representationalism and direct realism are equivalent in Descartes. At
the end, the survey of influence and transformation of understanding of ideas
in early modern philosophy is presented.
Keywords: theory of ideas, direct realism, representationalism, Francisco Suárez, conceptus formalis, conceptus objectivus, early modern philosophy