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Descartes, René 1596-1650
French philosopher and mathematician, usually regarded as the father of modern philosophy

Descartes was born near Tours in a small town now called La-Haye-Descartes, and was educated from 1604 to 1614 at the Jesuit College at La Flèche. He remained a Catholic all his life, and he was careful to modify or even suppress some of his later scientific views, for example his sympathy with Nicolaus Copernicus, no doubt aware of Galilei's condemnation by the Inquisition in 1634. He studied law at Poitiers, graduating in 1616; then from 1618 he enlisted at his own expense for private military service, mainly in order to travel and to have the leisure to think. He was in Germany with the army of the Duke of Bavaria one winter's day in 1619 when he had his famous intellectual vision in the 'stove-heated room': he conceived a reconstruction of the whole of philosophy, and indeed of knowledge, into a unified system of certain truth modelled on mathematics and supported by a rigorous rationalism.

From 1618 to 1628 he travelled widely in Holland, Germany, France and Italy; then in 1628 returned to Holland where he remained, living quietly and writing until 1649. Few details are known of his personal life, but he did have an illegitimate daughter called Francine, whose death in 1640 at the age of five was apparently a terrible blow for him.

In 1649 he left Holland for Stockholm on the invitation of Queen Kristina who wanted him to give her tuition in philosophy. These lessons took place three times a week at 5am and were especially taxing for Descartes whose habit of a lifetime was to stay in bed meditating and reading until about 11am. He contracted pneumonia and died. His last words were supposedly a mon âme, il faut partir ('So my soul a time for parting'). He was buried in Stockholm but his body was later removed to Paris and eventually transferred to Saint-Germain-des-Prés.

Bibliography: Descartes' more popular works were published in French, the more scholarly ones first in Latin. The Discours de la méthode (1637, 'Discourse on Method'), the Meditationes de prima Philosophia (1641, 'Mediations on First Philosophy') and the Principia Philosophiae (1644, 'Principles of Philosophy') set out the fundamental Cartesian doctrines: the method of systematic doubt; the first indubitably true proposition, je pense, donc je suis or cogito ergo sum ('I think, therefore I am'); the idea of God as the absolutely perfect Being; and the dualism of mind and matter.

Other philosophical works include Regulae ad directionem ingenii ('Rules for the Direction of the Mind', composed in the later 1620s, but unfinished and published posthumously in 1701) and Les Passions de l'âme (1649, 'Passions of the Soul'). He also made important contributions in astronomy, for example with his theory of vortices, and more especially in mathematics, where he reformed algebraic notation and helped to found co-ordinate geometry.

Bibliography: L J Beck, The Method of Descartes (1987); Leon Pearl, Descartes (1977); Elizabeth S Haldane, Descartes: His Life and Times (1905).


La lecture de tous les bons livres est comme une conversation avec les plus honnêtes gens des siècles passés, qui en ont été les auteurs, et même une conversation étudiée en laquelle ils ne nous découvrent que les meilleures de leurs pensées.
'The reading of good books is like a conversation with the best men of past centuries - in fact like a prepared conversation, in which they reveal their best thoughts.'
From Discours de la méthode, 1st discourse (trans by G E M Anscombe and Peter Geach).
Agnoscam fieri non posse ut existam talis naturae qualis sum, nempe ideam Dei in me habens, nisi revera Deus etiam existeret, Deus, inquam, ille idem cujus idea in me est.
'I could not possibly exist with the nature I actually have, that is, one endowed with the idea of God, unless there really is a God; the very God, I mean, of whom I have an idea.'
From Meditationes, 3rd meditation (trans by G E M Anscombe and Peter Geach).