Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Descartes, René (1596-1650) – Exégèse'
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Irimia, Gheorghe-Florin. "Descartes et l’imaginaire littéraire et scientifique baroque." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 2023. http://www.theses.fr/2023UBFCH039.
Full textThis research work revolves around two complementary centers of interest. On the one hand, the aim is to shed light on the Cartesian way of considering the question of objectivity, and on the other hand, to show the anchoring of Cartesian thought in a broader cultural horizon, which is commonly, and perhaps also roughly, called "baroque", from the aesthetic studies of Heinrich Wölfflin and the generalization of the Wölfflinian concept of "baroque" to literature by Jean Rousset and, then, to the whole of the cultural productions of the end of the sixteenth century and the first half of the seventeenth century by Didier Souillet.By virtue of this research topic, I relate Baroque scholarly culture to several major themes in Cartesian physics and metaphysics: the critique of likeness; the sensible/material relation; the geometrical understanding of matter; the metaphysical understanding of the world as pure exteriority; the relation between understanding, imagination, and the senses; the euristic value of imagination; the multiple meanings of the concept of "nature"; and the free divine institution of the principles of nature.Similarly, I discuss how Baroque literature sometimes views reality as a dreamlike or theatrical representation - particularly in Calderón's Life is a Dream and Shakespeare's The Tempest - and I highlight how Descartes draws from the Baroque literary imagination the main themes of the first two Metaphysical Meditations.Third, I present the place of curiosity, admiration, and the "curious sciences" in Baroque scholarly culture, from the Baroque vogue for the marvellous to the wonder of the technical productions of the time and their ability to deceive the viewer, to show how these dominants of Baroque scholarly culture determine the evolution of Cartesian thought about nature, from Cartesian interest in optical illusion experiments to the critique of likeness and the mechanistic approach to nature
Feller, Waldemar. "Descartes e as humanidades." [s.n.], 1998. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/251102.
Full textTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Educação
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Doutorado
Guenancia, Pierre. "Recherches sur les problèmes du sens et le fondement de l'objectivité dans les philosophies de la conscience : Descartes et l'intelligence du sensible." Paris 4, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA040140.
Full textThe first part of this work examines the problem of the perception of sensitive things in various texts by Descartes, namely in tat of the 2nd meditation devoted to the analysis of the piece of wax and shows that there is no opposition between sensitivity and understanding for the simple reason that it is always understanding that comes to knowledge. Therefore, in Descartes, the mind is not divided into faculties to which different types would correspond. The conception of the soul as a thing that thinks comes under a different light through this result, for the sensitive is not reluctant to the thought. It is the sensualism and the empiric idea of a sensitive knowledge that are criticized by Descartes, it is neither the senses nor the sensitive. The second part shows how the Cartesian analyses of passions state that the latter are not enemies to reason but on the contrary are necessary to the satisfaction of the soul united to the body whose importance in morality is therefore emphasized. Reasoning and sensivity are no more opposed here than in the field of knowledge and it is even the principle of such a duality which is questioned. Even more relevant than this distinction is the one Descartes kept on making between direct knowledge and reflexive knowledge, the latter characterizing, for him, understanding in its specific use. The conclusion shows how the analysis of the knowledge of sensitive things and that of passions merge, and how Cartesian metaphysics can naturally apply to knowledge and the practice of the world
Dumont, Pascal. "L'art d'émerveiller : étude sur la pensée esthétique de Descartes." Paris 1, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA010559.
Full textStarzynski, Wojciech. "Les implications théologiques et religieuses dans la métaphysique de Descartes." Paris 4, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA040069.
Full textVasco, Nathalie. "Descartes et Saint-Augustin." Paris 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA010516.
Full textDevillairs, Laurence. "La connaissance des attributs divins chez Descartes." Paris 4, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA040253.
Full textDelia, Luigi. "La verità filosofica nel pensiero di Descartes : studio storico, critico e semantico." Dijon, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007DIJOL025.
Full textThe question of truth, that is of its research and of the proper experiences that allow to grasp it (the necessity of the method); of its possibility and of its origin; of its characteristics and of the choices that imply it; of its constraining force and of its intellectual formation; of its coherence and of its correspondence; of its univocallity and of its diverse discursive modulation (distinction of the three primitive notions); of the use, last, that we must rightly make of it in light of science’s progress and of human moral development, is not a localised question but indeed transpires through all the Cartesian philosophy project. The defended thesis was fixed around a triple objective: to reconstruct the intellectual context within which is shaped the Cartesian idea of truth; to conduct an enquiry within Descartes’ work, aiming to think over the main interpretative problems linked to this notion; to conduct a lexical study dedicated to the negative register about truth
Macris-L'Hoest, Marie-Claire. "Descartes opticien : le problème de la réfraction chez Descartes et ses contemporains." Paris 1, 1985. http://www.theses.fr/1985PA010252.
Full textDauvois, Daniel. "La représentation chez Descartes." Paris 4, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA040112.
Full textSILVA, PRISCILA ALBA DA. "TRUTH X VERISIMILITUDE: NOTES FROM RENÉ DESCARTES (1596-1650) AND GIAMBATTISTA VICO (1668-1744)." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2016. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=27504@1.
Full textCOORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DO PESSOAL DE ENSINO SUPERIOR
PROGRAMA DE SUPORTE À PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO DE INSTS. DE ENSINO
Partindo da análise das obras de René Descartes (1596-1650) e da concepção de retórica enquanto uma metalinguagem, fornecida tanto por Roland Barthes quanto por Haroldo de Campos, investigamos certa tensão entre Giambattista Vico (1668-1744) e o filósofo francês. Atrito forjado a partir da leitura indireta do retor napolitano das obras de Descartes. Este trabalho trata, portanto, da diferença entre a certificação do conhecimento em Descartes e Vico, diferença que, segundo elucidamos, pode ser situada na tensão entre os conceitos de verdade e verossimilhança, respectivamente, bem como nos conceitos de sentido e senso. Em 1699, Giambattista Vico assumiu a cátedra de Retórica na Universidade Real de Nápoles. A partir deste ano e, até o ano de 1707, o filósofo proferiu discursos de abertura dos anos letivos nesta instituição. Esses discursos nos chegam sob o título de Orazioni Inaugurali (1699-1707), donde foram analisadas, na presente dissertação, às duas primeiras, concernentes aos anos de 1699 e 1700. Tal análise procurou nuançar não apenas o entrelaçamento entre forma e conteúdo como, também, a partir disso, sugerir que a verossimilhança viquiana incide formalmente em seus textos, assim como a verdade cartesiana seria derivada de certa estrutura textual.
Analyzing the works of René Descartes (1596-1650) and the conception of rhetoric as a meta language, provided both by Roland Barthes and by Haroldo de Campos, we investigated tension between Giambattista Vico (1668-1744) and the French philosopher. Misunderstanding forged from indirect reading of Neapolitan rector of the works of Descartes. This work analyzes the difference between the certification of knowledge in Descartes and Vico, a difference that, according elucidated, may be located in the tension between the concepts of truth and verisimilitude, respectively, as well as the concepts of way and sense. In 1699, Giambattista Vico took over the chair of Rhetoric at the Royal University of Naples. From this year by the year 1707, the philosopher gave opening speeches of school years at this institution. These talks come in under the heading of Orazioni Inaugurali (1699-1707), from which were analyzed in the present work the first two, pertaining to the years 1699 and 1700. This analysis sought to nuance not only the interweaving between form and content as, also, from there, suggest that the verisumilitude viquiana focuses formally in his writings, as well as the Cartesian truth would be derived from certain textual structure.
Agostini, Siegrid. "Claude Clerselier, editore e traduttore di René Descartes." Paris, EPHE, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007EPHE5007.
Full textThe aim of this thesis is to give a historic reconstruction of the figure of Claude Clerselier and emphasize not only the role he played in the edition and translation of some works by René Descartes, but also in the defence of the Cartesian theses on the Eucharist. The principal source for the reconstruction of the relationships and debates is constituted by the manuscript n. 366 (Sentimens de Mr Descartes et de ses sectateurs sur le Mystère de l’Eucharistie. Recueil curieux et rare) in town library of Chartres : the documents included in this manuscript are mostly some letters or abstracts of letters written and received by Clerselier between 1654 and 1681. Clerselier is also important because of his activity of editor and translator of Descartes. To outline the portrait of the activity of Clerselier editor I first examined the Préfaces to the edition of the Lettres which constitute some sources, very rich in information; the same Lettres are a very important testimony because from them comes out Clerselier’s willing to celebrate the greatness of Descartes and reconstruct an edifying image of this philosopher. My thesis is made up of two volumes. The volume I contains, after an introduction, four chapters followed by a conclusion, a general chronological table of Clerselier’s correspondence, and a bibliography (some manuscripts, some printed sources and some studies). The volume II contains the transcription of the letters of the manuscript n. 366, according to the alphabetical order of the correspondents (Bertet, Daniel, Denis, Desgabets, Fabri, Malaval, Pastel, Poisson, Terson, Vinot, Viogué)
Marsan, Eddy. "Etude comparative et critique de l'exigence de systeme chez lulle et descartes." Toulouse 2, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992TOU20021.
Full textThe description of the work of lull and then of the cartesian system reveals that both are upheld by the desire for systematic architectronics. Lull , in the thirth century and descartes in the seventh century attempted to constitue a unique method which would enable the return to the various sciences. Even if descartes, who was familiar with the work of lull, denies any relation between his work and lull's great art, it should, however, be noted that he takes up the lullian idea of total knowledge. Indeed, the french philosopher joins the same neo-platonic filiation as lull and seems only to criticize lull's endeavour severely to dissimulate the relation with his own work. Lull and descartes break with an attitude of contemplation of nature and try to impose systematic knowledge. Lull and descartes do not go against catholic tradition. They lilit thelselves to transcribing the message of tradition in terms of the conquering thought of western christianity. The essential proximity which is revealed between contemporary logic and the lullian and cartesian systems is that of their autonomy. Basing their work on founding intuition and deliberately cutting themselves off reality appear as autonomous attempts: the person who conceives the system provides proof of it, but this proof may be without any value for someone who does no accept the initial postulat which is identified with the founding intuition
Mathieu, Louise. "Descartes et la question de Dieu : la place et la fonction de l'idée de Dieu dans la pensée cartésienne." Dijon, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004DIJOL022.
Full textDescartes declare on several occasions want to defend God, to fight impious persons, bring to infidels and persons who turn away church, the proof about the existence of God but also give them sound doctrine on transsubstantiation, divine liberty, God, eternals thruths. He says also speak about Infiny only for subject himself and speak about with great dignity. Lastly, he’s forever repeating that he look for the truth in the things for to go with insurance in this existence. For that, it obtains a method and will try to find the proof of the existence of God not in the world, i. E. In the empirical experiment, nor in the Scriptures which he however considers higher than his thoughts, but in his spirit. Only, by this step where the reason starts to conceptualize the name of the transcendence and to want to subject it to his diktat, Descartes is not, according to us, more speaking about God of the Bible but to work out an subject-object of the metaphysics which has the name of God but who is not God. All in all, while bringing his own conception, while protesting his christianity and his respect for the religion of his childhood (catholicism), one should do to wonder about his philosophy as much as on the man who was Descartes. Can Descartes think himself christian and to insist on his love of God, in his writings, when Christ misses of his philosophy and that his “théodicée” is reduced only to some lines in the meditations three and six ? What Descartes look for ? To affirm his belief in God for better subjecting himself to him ? To prove the existence of God with an aim of making him a solid base for his new philosophy, which does include a physics as well as a metaphysics or to work out his own "metaphysical subject-object" ? The intentions of the author, sincere or not, did they show, through his attempts to present doctrines coherent and acceptable on God, the impossibility of saying anything truth and valid on God that the sacred Texts tell to us ? The only proof of the existence of God who prevails isn't is the fact that the Christ who is God and the miracles so that we can finally believe that God is love and that his is alive?
Gonzalez, Solange. "Le lieu chez Descartes." Paris 4, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040234.
Full textThe noncompletion of Descartes'Regulae and the disappearance of the syntagma of mathesis universalis in later works lead us to believe a self-denial on Descartes behalf wich express itself in his failure to structure reality. To investigate the question of Descartes'locus presumes follow the evolution of his thought and allows a transversal course of his work. The notion of locus permits such a voyage by expressing itself first trough a paradox that leads us to the heart of Descartes' philosophy: we expect to find its definition in the field of physics and we are surprised to know that bodies fill no locus, because they don't move from one locus to another and, more radically, whereas every movement is relative, we can legitimately consider that the same body does and does not move. Such a conception seems not to allow a mathematical physics. Such a failure has also to be connected to an evolution in Cartesian's conceptions improved in the Regulae, especially concerning the part of imagination; The exertion of ingenium nevrtheless supposes the existence of a body that incarnates. So that it is possible to wonder in Which way the world is the locus of God (Eucharisty) as is the body the locus of the soul
Onishi, Yoshitomo. "Volonté et indifférence chez Descartes." Paris 1, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA010509.
Full textGasparri, Giuliano. "La ricezione della teoria cartesiana delle verità eterne nella seconda metà del XVII secolo." Paris, EPHE, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005EPHE5013.
Full textThis study deals with the fortune and developments of the theory on the creation of eternal truths in cartesianism, between 1650 and 1700. The history of the Cartesian opinion on eternal truths, which was first enunciated in Descartes’ letters to Marin Mersenne in 1630 (AT I, 145-153), touches on many philosophical problems, ranging from the status of logics and mathematics axioms to theological questions about the relationship between possible and divine omnipotence. All the most important philosophers took part in the seventeenth century debate on the idea that eternal truths depend from God’s will, as one of the most difficult questions that rational theology tried to solve. This work concerns the opinions on this subject among others by Louis de La Forge, Pierre Cally, Robert Desgabets, Jean Sperlette, Pierre-Sylvain Régis, Pierre Poiret, Claude Clerselier, Nicolas Malebranche, Simon Foucher, Louis de la Ville, Pierre Daniel Huet, Jean du Hamel, Henri Lelevel, Adrian Heereboord, Christoph Wittich, Frans Burman, Lambert Van Velthuysen, Arnold Geulincx, Baruch Spinoza, Cornelis Bontekoe, Pierre Bayle, Samuel Pufendorf, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Jean le Clerc, Jean-Robert Chouet, Antoine le Grand, John Locke, Samuel Parker, John Sergeant, Henry Moore, Ralph Cudworth, George Rust, Samuel Clarke, John Norris
Oliveira, Erico Andrade Marques de. "Le rôle de la méthode dans la constitution de la physique cartésienne." Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040110.
Full textIn our thesis, we try to demonstrate how the Cartesian physics, specially that of the Traité and of the Principes, is constituted from the mathesis. From this angle, we tried to see in the mathesis, on the one hand, a discipline that is able to substitute ambiguous representations, originated in the sensitive experience, through scientific codes, providing these codes a grammar - composed by laws which support the building of a net of empirical propositions. Thus, the mathesis enabled a “figuration” of nature, showing through experience the size of the compatibility between the real and the simulacrum of science. On the other hand, we tried to emphasize the normative role of the mathesis that constrains the sciences to display their results according to a common deductive order, which goes from the simplest results to the most obscure ones, demonstrating the conceptual dependence grade between them
Grumelier, Alix. "Les analogies dans la métaphysique de Descartes." Thesis, Nantes, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020NANT2022.
Full textThe soul and God are the two principle objects of inquiry in Descartes' metaphysics. This doctoral dissertation will establish that Descartes employs a recurrent strategy to address these immaterial and supersensible objects: analogy. Descartes relies heavily on this technique, which can be divided into analogy of proportion and analogy of attribution. After analysing the relationship between metaphor, comparison, and analogy of proportion, I examine the role of analogies in five chapters, each dedicated to: ontological argument; the first a posteriori proof; sui causa; the creation of eternal truths; and knowledge of God and the soul, independently of proof of their existence. This dissertation thus proposes a nonexhaustive mapping of analogy in Cartesian metaphysics, showcasing their main uses, which are genetic, pedagogic, cathartic, clarifying and constitutive. I acknowledge and respond to counterarguments, concluding that Descartes' ideas constituted a modernisation of theological analogy, rather than a reform
Kambouchner, Denis. "La problématique cartésienne de l'affectivité." Paris 10, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990PA100109.
Full textIn his last published work (the treatise of the passions of the soul), descartes has tackled an "obscure and confused" matter that he had "never studied before". The fact is that the theory of emotions cannot achieve cartesian anthropology without imposing on the assertions of cartesian metaphysics several remarkable complications. In the course of a systematic analysis, organized around the main problems of the theory of passions (their general definition; their psycho-physiological explanation; their classification; their function of "use"; their submission to reason or to will; the relationship between affectivity and morality), one can give clear indication of a stratified structure of cartesian soul, which can be related to the distinction between its proper functions and those which imply its union to the body. The "inferior" functions of the soul, among which the passions take place, are intimately combined with brain functions in a functioning of man which can be qualified as animal. If the soul as "reasonable" can regard itself as exterior to this functioning, it appears nevertheless much more necessary. To the soul's life than it could seem to be, according to the meditations. The assurance of the "real distinction" between mind and body has therefore to be reinterpreted with respect to these conditions
Sciaccaluga, Nicoletta. "Potentia naturalis : rôle et disparition d'une notion centrale dans la physique du jeune Descartes." Caen, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008CAEN1507.
Full textUrrutia, Soto Álvaro. "Sobre la teoría de lo mental en Descartes: indagaciones acerca de la dualidad mente-cuerpo en las Meditaciones Metafísicas de Cartesio." Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2017. http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143604.
Full textLa obra presente se propone como objetivo indagar distintas vertientes o corrientes que puede adquirir la „teoría de lo mental‟ cartesiana con el motivo de entregar la versión que, a mi juicio, es la más justa y provechosa con respecto a las pretensiones del mismo autor como con lo que se quiere conseguir de él. De ninguna manera pretendo afirmar que la posición a la cual he llegado luego de esta investigación debe ser entendida como una posición definitiva o estandarizada de la filosofía cartesiana. Ante las típicas críticas surgidas por la caricaturización que Gilbert Ryle realizó sobre la filosofía de Descartes me propongo analizar si todo el conjunto de las mismas, englobadas por la general presunción del „fantasma dentro de la máquina‟ son, en definitiva, críticas válidas y acertadas a la hora de desprestigiar el sistema de Cartesio. Dicho de otro modo, me pregunto si toda crítica que apela al „dualismo cartesiano‟ es válida sólo por invocar al dualismo como un elemento reprochable de suyo. Pienso que las variables en cuanto a perspectivas que pueden surgir de un Descartes „dualista anómalo‟ son lo suficientemente amplias como para contraatacar al menos a algunos de los argumentos esbozados por los autores que condenan el dualismo, de modo que la teoría cartesiana de lo mental aún puede permanecer de pie en algunos campos de batalla (lo cual de ninguna manera afirma su veracidad). El motivo de un análisis tal consiste en demostrar que el pensamiento cartesiano no es tan fútil y tan fácil de combatir como colectivamente se piensa luego de los esfuerzos de Ryle.
Ramos, José Portugal dos Santos 1983. "Método e ciência em Descartes." [s.n.], 2013. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/279995.
Full textTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Huimanas
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Resumo: O propósito desta tese é explicar o método cartesiano por meio da lógica matemática que opera a sua constituição. Defende-se nesta pesquisa que, a partir dessa explicação do método, Descartes encontram meios que viabilizam a orientação de suas experimentações científicas. As experimentações científicas são iniciadas, então, quando Descartes encontra previamente uma determinada demonstração geométrica e visa, a partir desta, justificar os resultados da reconstrução de um fenômeno físico. No entanto, tal reconstrução requer outros meios da aplicação do método, pois neste momento trata-se da investigação de objetos que compõem um fenômeno físico. Nesta perspectiva, a aplicação do método de Descartes prescreve dois procedimentos de investigação científica, a saber, os procedimentos de redução e reconstrução. Sustenta-se nesta pesquisa que esses procedimentos requerem objetos manipuláveis que possibilitem, por meio do uso de suposições e analogias, a justificação experimental dos efeitos observados nos objetos físicos (ou seja, do fenômeno físico investigado). As obras de Descartes utilizadas nesta pesquisa são o Discurso do método e Ensaios complementares: A Geometria, a Dióptrica, os Meteoros, e ainda as Regras para orientação do espírito
Abstract: This thesis aims to explain the cartesian method through the mathematical logic which operates its constitution. It is defended in this thesis that, in this explanation of the method, Descartes finds geometric demonstrations that can guide his scientific experimentations. The scientific experimentations are started, so, when Descartes previously finds a particular geometrical demonstration and aims, through such demonstration, to justify the results of the reconstruction of physical phenomenon. However, such a reconstruction requires other means of the method's application, because in this moment it treats on the investigation of objects which compose a physical phenomenon. At this prospect, the application of Descartes' method prescribes two procedures of scientific enquiry, to wit, the ones of reduction and reconstruction. It is maintained in this thesis that such procedures require controllable objects which make possible, through suppositions and analogies, the experimental justification of the effects observed in the physics objects (i. e., as an investigated physical phenomenon). The works of Descartes used here are the Discourse on the Method and Complementary Essays: Geometry, Dioptrics, Meteors, and also Rules for the Direction of the Mind
Doutorado
Filosofia
Doutor em Filosofia
Wong, Alexandre. "Les figures de la volonté dans la philosophie de Descartes." Paris 1, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA010615.
Full textAucante, Vincent. "L'horizon métaphysique de la médecine de Descartes." Paris 4, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA040304.
Full textThe Descartes medicine is facing an odd paradox : parangon of the method in his discourse, always promised in his letters, its obvious deficiencies implicate unavoidably to suspect the whole philosopher's work, and particularly the efficiency of the method. Far from following rigorously a synthetic or an analytic order, the medicine is revealing itself to be a compromise of both, where the experientia has got actually the privilege. The explanation of all the physiology with the Cartesian physic is the only part systematically developed. Following the direct observation more than thesis of Galen or Paracelsus, the recombining of the "fabric" of human body has in fact a precarious status because it can be modified by any new discovery. In other respects, the physiology is nothing but a preliminary required for the development of a practical medicine, with pathology, etiology and therapeutics. Sparse in all the corpus, the many indications once got together reveal an important implication of the mind. It is then proved that the real subject of the Cartesian medicine is not the body alone, but the body causing pain in the soul. The incompletion of Cartesian medicine appears to result from a dual difficulty : on the one hand to discover all the wheels of the bodily machine, and on the other hand to understand the union of mind and body, which is only really known by god
Bitbol-Hespériès, Annie. "Le principe de vie chez Descartes et ses prédécesseurs." Paris 4, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA040158.
Full textThis thesis is dealing with the life principle in Descartes' philosophy. The cartesian life principle is linked with dualism that is with the difference between soul and body. The cartesian life principle is therefore completely new: as explained in “L’homme” (p. 202) and "Les passions de l'âme", article 107 (at,xi,p407), it is not linked with the soul, but is the heat in the heart, the famous "Feu sans lumière". I demonstrate that this conception is completely new and that it has nothing to do with either the aristotelician or the galenic "innate heat". I thus explain Descartes' examples and compare his explanations on the movement of the heart to Aristotle's and Harvey's conceptions. I also examine the keplerian idea on that topic. While working on my thesis i identified some cartesian anatomical sources
Pricladnitzky, Pedro Falcão. "Os fundamentos metafísicos da física cartesiana : a natureza da substância extensa." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/140251.
Full textChevalier, Olivia. "La méthode analytique cartésienne : entre mathématiques et philosophie première." Paris 10, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA100195.
Full textSince about his way to proue in mathematics and metaphysics Descartes talks in the singular of his "voie analytique ", our aim is to define the univocal use of what lie calls « analysis », understood as a thought process. Indeed, this point raines a problem because of the lack of logical sirnilarities between the proofs in these two disciplines. Descartes says that the analytic way allows us to discover truths while constructing the solution to a problem (the problem of Pappus or of certainty). Then, analyzing, for Descartes, amounts to proving while constructing the solution to a problem. So, we try to understand the links existing between the proof of truths (a truth is established once we have discovered it) and the method which gives the procedures of it. Hence we talk of Cartesian "analytic method". We then redraw the steps of the conception of the notion of analysis which, to us, seem to lead to its Cartesian meaning, insisting on the important role algebra plays in its formation. Afterwards, we draw the criteria which bear certain properties to this analytic thought process, and which enable us to recognize it; finally, we exhibit the limit of this univocal conception when Descartes cornes to handle the notion of infinity. The stakes of our study are the following ones exhibit a Cartesian "theory of proof"; the impossibility to disconnect Descartes as mathernatician and philosopher; the latter point serving a general thesis (at least true until the 18`h century) essential to us the impossibility to separate the history of truth from the history of mathematics
Roger, Julia. "Descartes et ses livres : l'édition comme geste philosophique." Caen, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015CAEN1027.
Full textThe present work finds its origins in the lack of interest of Descartes for the books. This lack of interest stems from the vanity of likely knownledges they convey and their materiality which prevent the reader to grab the truth they could hold. This lack of personal interest of Descartes for the book as an object is an epistemological condemnation which takes place at the heart of a critique of authority: What makes authority for knowing the truth? Can a media such as the book be used to teach true philosophy? What is an author and what is a book? The present work aims at questionning these subjects through the prism of publishing. The study of Descartes books editorial properties is at the core of this thesis and allows to understand how Descartes, a disappointed reader, was so much involved in the publishing of his works: Discours de la méthode, Meditationes de prima philosophia, Principia philosophiae, Specimina philosophiae and Passions de l’âme
Beveraggi, Hervé. "La liberté spéculative chez Descartes et Spinoza." Aix-Marseille 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997AIX10068.
Full textThe problem of freedom of thought in general, and more particulary in front of truth, which can be called speculative truth, does not find a satisfying explanation with descartes and spinoza, the representatives of the efforts from reasoning reason to include the problem of freedom of thought in a system of rationality. Both philosophers include it inside different ontologies, confront it to theories of truth which are different as well. For, speculative truth indeed, manifests itself in front of the couple truth - error : falsehood prevents it, it a source of constraint, truth only provides the highest feeling of freedom for descartes, or is merely synonymous with freedom for spinoza. But, on the other hand, it seems impossible for us to speak about freedom if we connot refuse what is true, if it necessarily asserts itself into us. If descartes manages to safeguard the experience of free - will while affirming the possibility for the individual to think of whatever he wants, and to think whatever he wants about a true idea, it is then at the expenses of contradictions inner to his system as far as the following relationships are concerned : freedom - transparency of thought, freedom - truth, freedom - divine conscience. Spinoza avoids these contradictions by refusing free - will, from the systematic criticism of its foundations, but affirms a free necessity wich is no longer really a freedom, consisting in an inner necessity of the mathematical type, and assigns it in a third genre of knowledge, inaccessible in the end
Silva, Mateus Araújo. "Le problème de l'imagination chez Descartes." Paris 1, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA010593.
Full textComtois, Nicolas. "Préparation à la lecture des Méditations de Descartes." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/27862.
Full textPalma, Lohse Emilio Eugenio. "Bacon y Descartes: las bases filosóficas de la ciencia moderna." Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2010. http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/109956.
Full textConfalonieri, Sara. "Impossibility results : from geometry to analysis : a study in early modern conceptions of impossibility." Paris 7, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA070060.
Full textThis dissertation deals with impossibility results in the context of early modern geometry (XVIlth century). The main problems and questions I shall address in my study are the following. How did early modem geometers prove (or argued for) the impossibilities of solving construction problems by prescribed means? Can we identify similar structures and similar roles in different instances of these impossibility arguments? My starting point is one of the first exemples of algebraic thinking in geometry, namely, Descartes' epoch-making « La Géométrie » (1637). My examination of « La Géométrie » mainly concerns the methodological points of this treatise: the foundations of the distinction between geometrical and mechanical curves, and the classification of curves and problems. A general thesis I advance in my work is that conditional impossibility claims exerted a twofold methodological, or metatheoretical role. Firstly, they contribute to frame the demarcation between acceptable and non acceptable curves. Secondly, conditional impossibility claims enter in the classification of problems on the ground of the curves which construct them, sketched in the third Book of « La Géométrie » an( commented by Van Schooten in his latin editions from 1649 and 1659. The presence of impossibility claims in a treatise, like Descartes' « Géométrie », devoted to lay down the fundamentals of a method to solve all problems of geometry, is not surprising, in so far such a method should provide the guidelines in order to solve each problem according to the most adequate means
Kim, Sun-Young. "Subjectivité et individualité chez Descartes." Paris 1, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA010516.
Full textRivera, Víctor Samuel. "Una "gramática universal" cartesiana." Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2013. http://repositorio.pucp.edu.pe/index/handle/123456789/101422.
Full textLima, Jair Araújo de. "A temporalidade nas substâncias infinita, pensante e extensa do sistema cartesiano." reponame:Repositório Institucional da UnB, 2007. http://repositorio.unb.br/handle/10482/2866.
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Os conceitos de substância e temporalidade podem ser considerados como dois elementos essenciais para a compreensão de diversos aspectos da metafísica e da física cartesiana. As substâncias finitas (res cogitans e rex extensa) dependem da substância infinita (Deus) em diversos aspectos, principalmente no que concerne à criação, bem como à permanência no ser. Portanto, Deus, a substância por excelência, determina o caráter substancial daquilo que é finito e isso influencia diretamente o aspecto temporal das substâncias finitas. As repercussões dessa influência podem ser observadas na noção de duração, presente no pensamento, e também na teoria física cartesiana no que se refere à criação e à conservação do movimento. Tendo como base as obras Discurso do Método, Meditações e Princípios da Filosofia, observaremos a relevância dos conceitos de substância e de temporalidade na filosofia de Descartes. Assim sendo, a pretensão no presente trabalho é defender a existência de um estreito vínculo entre a substancialidade e a temporalidade. _________________________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT
The concepts of substance and temporality can be considered as two essential elements to understand several aspects of Cartesian metaphysics and physics. The finite substances (res cogitans and res extensa) depend on the infinite substance (God) in manly aspects, especially those concerned to creation and permanence in being. As a result, God, the substance per excellence, determines the substantial character for everything that is finite and this influences directly the temporal aspects of finite substances. Repercussions of this influence can be observed in the idea of duration, which is present in the action of thinking, and in the Cartesian physics theory about creation and movement conservation. Based on the books Discourse on the Method, Meditations on First Philosophy and Principles of Philosophy, we will examine the meaning of the concepts of substance and temporality in Descartes’ philosophy. In view of the above, the aim of the present work is to defend the existence of a narrow link between substantiality and temporality.
Loyola, Maureira Diego. "El geómetra, o, Apuntes para una interpretación no dualista de la filosofía cartesiana." Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2010. http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/109944.
Full textBouvier, Alban. "Essai d'anthroposociologie de l'argumentation philosophiques : hétérogénéités et dissonances dans les Méditations métaphysiques de Descartes et dans le Contrat social de Rousseau." Paris 4, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991PA040221.
Full textWhat thought processes are required from the reader of a philosophical work for him to understand it and possibly give his assent ?. .
Bellis, Delphine Julie. "Le visible et l’invisible dans la pensée cartésienne : figuration, imagination et vision dans la philosophie naturelle de René Descartes." Thesis, Paris 4, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA040015.
Full textMy aim, in this dissertation, is to explore the various aspects of the process of figuration in Descartes’ philosophy, particularly with respect to the knowledge of natural bodies. Moving from Descartes’ early to his more mature works, we find that the notion of figure (or shape) played a variety of roles: it possessed a methodological function, as a conventional representation of the relations between our notions, but also designated, respectively, a geometrical object, a mode of extension assigned by metaphysics to the reality of bodies, and an external delimitation of sensible bodies or of invisible corpuscles in physics. In analyzing these different functions, my aim is to understand how Descartes’ thought evolved from the Regulae to later texts, while trying to answer a new problem that did not exist for the scholastics, namely that of the knowledge of the shape of determined bodies. This problem arose partly because Descartes’ metaphysics had established shape as an essential mode of bodily extension, while at the time refusing a priori to appeal to sensation for knowledge, but it also emerged for purely epistemological reasons in the process of constituting a new physics. In my thesis, I argue that one key to this problem is to be found in the theory of vision, presented in the Dioptrique, a text that moves, however, towards a corpuscular physics that relies on a specific use of imagination and experience. From this analysis of the notion of figure or shape, we are able to shed a different light on what so far has been considered an integral aspect of the 17th century’s mathematisation of nature
Tsuzaki, Yoshinori. "L' exercice chez Descartes : méthode, anthropologie et morale." Paris 1, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA010551.
Full textPastén, Recabarren Camilo. "Escepticismo cartesiano a causa de la infecundidad del cogito: una interpretación de la doctrina cartesiana sin Dios." Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2011. http://www.repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/110011.
Full textFurtado, Thiago Martins. "Descartes meditando : a formação do sujeito no exercicio meditativo." [s.n.], 2009. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/281921.
Full textDissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas
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Resumo: Esta dissertação tem como objeto a formação do sujeito cartesiano nas Meditações Metafísicas, partindo da leitura de Michel Foucault. Ao analisar a obra maior de Descartes, especialmente com o texto "Mon corps, ce papier, ce feu" (1972), Foucault enfatizou a trama "ascética" do discurso meditativo, que se cruza com a trama demonstrativa. É pelo exercício (ascese) que o sujeito se forma ou se transforma pelas enunciações discursivas. O conceito de meditação, seu aspecto ascético, é portanto o núcleo deste trabalho, que foi dividido em três partes: a primeira faz uma análise do conceito de linguagem na obra cartesiana, visando explicar se há um ideal estilístico propugnado pelo filósofo francês e quais os motivos que o levaram a optar pela forma discursiva 'meditação'. A segunda parte analisa o 'exercício meditativo' a partir de uma dupla perspectiva: de um lado descreve a meditação como uma prática que engloba um conjunto de regras que constituem uma arte (techné); por outro, analisa a meditação como forma discursiva ou gênero literário/filosófico, indicando as origens do discurso cartesiano nas obras legadas pela literatura cristã. O objetivo deste segundo capítulo é mostrar os pontos de continuidade da filosofia cartesiana com a tradição mas, principalmente, mostrar a especificidade de uma 'meditação demonstrativa' em oposição às meditações místicas. O terceiro capítulo aborda o texto cartesiano como uma "obra de arte", isto é, destaca e analisa as estratégias narrativas utilizadas por Descartes nas Meditações - enredo, narrador, tempo/espaço, estilo, etc. Finalmente, na conclusão, além da enumeração dos resultados obtidos pela pesquisa, mostraremos que há em Descartes uma solidariedade e coerência entre o emprego de uma forma discursiva teórica e um "modo de vida filosófico", o que nos aproxima da tese sustentada pelo historiador francês Pierre Hadot
Abstract: The present dissertation takes as its object the formation of the Cartesian subject in the Metaphysical Meditations, taking as point of departure Michel Foucault's reading of the subject. When he analyzed Descartes' greatest work, especially as we see in the text "Mon corps, ce papier, ce feu" (1972), Foucault emphasized the meditative discourse's "ascetic" scheme, which is entangled with the demonstrative scheme. It is through the exercise (ascesis) that the subject forms itself or transforms itself by the discursive enunciations. The concept of mediation, its ascetic character, is therefore the core of the present work, which was divided in three parts: the first analyzes the concept of language in the Cartesian work, trying to explain if there is a stylistic ideal carried forth by the French philosopher, and what were his motivations for adopting the meditative discursive form. The second part analyzes the 'meditative exercise' from a double perspective: in one hand the meditation is described as a praxis which presupposes a set of rules constituent of a certain art (techné); on the other, the meditation is analyzed as a discursive form or literary/philosophic genre, whose origins can be traced back in the works produced by the christian literature. This second chapter aims at showing the points of continuity between the Cartesian philosophy and the tradition, but, furthermore, it aims at showing the specificity of a 'demonstrative meditation' in opposition to the mystical meditations. The third chapter approaches the Cartesian text as a 'work of art', that is, it detaches and analyzes the narrative strategies used by Descartes in the Meditations - plot, narrator, space/time, style, etc. Finally, in our conclusion, besides enumerating the results obtained through our research, we shall show that there is in Descartes a solidarity and coherency between the use of a theoretical discursive form and a "philosophical way of life", what makes us closer to the thesis sustained by the French historian Pierre Hadot
Mestrado
Filosofia
Mestre em Filosofia
Campos, Mariana de Almeida. "La question du sujet des sentiments dans le dualisme de Descartes." Thesis, Dijon, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014DIJOL007/document.
Full textThe goal of this thesis is to address the question of what would be the subject of the predicates that denote sentiments in Descartes’ writings. The proposed hypothesis is that substances can only be regarded as « the ultimate subjects of inherence » of these predicates. Nevertheless, it will be argued that men and animals, although they are not substances, may be considered the « subjects of attribution » of such predicates, since they have a specific unit, namely, a « unity of composition », which ensures that attribution. Therefore, the thesis will be developed in three main axes. From an examination of the Cartesian theory of substance and its definitions, we analyze the concept of extended substance, taking into account the existing debate between monistic and pluralistic interpretations of this concept. In this context, we examine the specificity of the human body in relation to other bodies of nature, considering certain aspects of the Cartesian theory of animal machines. Then we address the question of the unity of man, as well as other types of unity recognized by Descartes. Finally, we examine the Cartesian theory of causality in order to determine which theories of causality, interactionism, or occasionalism, in Descartes view, could serve as explanatory models for sentiments in humans and animals. The hypothesis to be defended in this thesis is consistent with the view that the Cartesian theory of three particular primitive notions, namely, thought, extension, and union, is fully compatible with the metaphysical dualism of substances that Descartes proposed, and therefore does not imply a weakening of the latter
Kaposi, Dorottya. "La liberté de l’esprit selon Descartes : la doctrine de la volonté et la question de l’individualité." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040052.
Full textThe main purpose of this study is to examine the role of the Cartesian doctrine of the will in the establishment of the ego’s individuality, as well as its consequences for the individual responsibility and for the problem of the relation of the “I” to other subjects. An analysis of Descartes’s early writings establishes that the development of his doctrine of freedom can be accounted for neither by the treatment of theological or moral questions arising from study of the traditional concept of “liberum arbitrium”, nor, as might be suggested by its appearance in the Fourth Meditation, with reference to his attempt to formulate a theory which could explain the causes of error. This point is clearly connected to the problem which arises when one considers that the inquiries and intellectual procedures of the ego may be determined quite independently of it by external circumstances and powers. Hence, the consideration that the Cartesian ego refuses to depend on the influence of any Other requires, first, an analysis of the possible relationship between the “I” and the Other and, second, an investigation of the modalities according to which the “I” can consider thoughts and actions as its own. My analysis of the status of will in this framework reveals a link between the problem of imputation and the question of alterity, two issues which must be treated in relation to each other. In conclusion, I try to show that it is only in the realm of morality that man, the concept of whom is related to Descartes’s doctrine of the union of body and mind, can have access to a real relation with the other “selves” as “free causes”, forming with them a community of moral subjects
Elemzésem fő célja megvizsgálni a karteziánus akarat-doktrina szerepét az ego individualitásának megalapozásában, valamint hogy ez a kérdéskör hogyan függ össze az individuális felelősség és a másikhoz való viszony problémáival. Descartes korai írásainak elemzése alapján megállapíthatjuk, hogy a szabadság doktrinájának megformálása nem annak köszönhető, hogy a szerző a hagyományos szabad akarat fogalom használatából eredő teológiai és morális kérdéseket tárgyalná, s nem is annak, hogy egy olyan elméletet akarna megalkotni, amely képes megmagyarázni a tévedés okát – mint ahogy azt a IV. Elmélkedésben való megjelenése sugallná. Gondolatmenetének fejlődése lényegileg összefügg annak a lehetőségnek a problémájával, hogy az ego intellektuális tevékenységét külső, tőle független körülmények és erők határozhatnák meg. Ha észrevesszük tehát, hogy a karteziánus ego elutasítja a másik befolyását, ebből két kérdés vizsgálata kerül előtérbe: egyrészt, az énnek a másikhoz való viszonyának problémaköre, másrészt pedig az a kérdés, hogy mi teszi lehetővé, hogy az én önmagához tartozónak tekintse saját gondolatait és cselekedeteit. Az akarat státuszának ebben a keretben történő elemzése megmutatja a tulajdoníthatóság és az alteritás problémái közti mély kapcsolatot, amelyeket így egymással összefüggésben szükséges tárgyalni. Munkánk végén megpróbáljuk megmutatni, hogy az ember, akinek fogalma a test-lélek egységének tanítására épül, egyedül a morál keretei között képes a többi „én”-nel mint „szabad okok”-kal való reális viszony kiépítésére, és létrehozni velük a morális szubjektumok együttesét
Larralde, Philippe. "Heidegger et descartes : d'une perspective neocartesienne face a la question de l'etre." Caen, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993CAEN1116.
Full textGormier, Laurence. "La question de l'union de l'âme et du corps à partir de la pensée de Descartes : âme-corps, méditation, méthode." Lyon 3, 2003. https://scd-resnum.univ-lyon3.fr/out/theses/2003_out_gormier_l.pdf.
Full textMehl, Édouard. "Descartes en Allemagne : 1619-1620 : le contexte allemand de l'élaboration de la science cartésienne." Paris 4, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA040177.
Full textDubouclez, Olivier. "L'invention de l'analyse : généalogie d'un concept d'Aristote à Descartes." Paris 4, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA040195.
Full textThis work is dedicated to the study of the concept of analysis, of its shaping in the fields of method and epistemology from Aristotle to Descartes. It argues that such a notion has evolved from a marginal scientific tool, unable to fit the axiomatic model of the Aristotelian analytics, to a widespread form of scientific knowledge. Such an evolution is grounded in the leading function of subjectivity at the heart of analytical method : as a consequence, is has contributed to giving an increasing role to analysis in the search for truth. Starting with Descartes' discourse about ancient analysis and ending with his metaphysics, the present study deals with the various conceptions of analysis - mathematical, dialectical or physical - in the Greek, Arabic and Latin contexts ; from their interpretation it establishes that the transformations of analysis have caused a radical change in the very nature of thought and in the order of its process
Safou, Jean-Bernard. "Husserl et la métaphysique de Descartes : essai d'une interprétation phénoménologique du projet cartésien de la Mathesis universalis." Paris 4, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA040047.
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