Semel in Vita: Descartes’ stoic view on the place of philosophy in human life

Faith and Philosophy 24 (2):165-184 (2007)
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Abstract

In his June 1643 letter to Princess Elizabeth, Descartes makes a claim that is a bit surprising given the hyper-intellectualism of the Meditations and other texts. He says that philosophy is something that we should do only rarely. Here I show how Descartes’ recommendation falls out of other components of his system—in particular his stoicism and his views on embodiment. A consequence of my reading is that to an important degree the reasoning of the Fourth Meditation is the imprecise reasoning of a not-yet-Cartesian meditator

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original Cunning, David (2007) "Semel in Vita". Faith and Philosophy 24(2):165-184

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David Cunning
University of Iowa

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Descartes, Passion, and the Ability to Do Otherwise.Christopher Gilbert - 2013 - Journal of Philosophical Research 38:275-298.

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