{"id":68801,"date":"2016-06-22T23:32:39","date_gmt":"2016-06-23T03:32:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/rationalism-continental-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/"},"modified":"2016-06-22T23:32:39","modified_gmt":"2016-06-23T03:32:39","slug":"rationalism-continental-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/rationalism\/rationalism-continental-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/","title":{"rendered":"Rationalism, Continental | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Continental rationalism is a retrospective category used to    group together certain philosophers working in continental    Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, in    particular, Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, especially as    they can be regarded in contrast with representatives of    British empiricism, most notably, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. Whereas the British    empiricists held that all knowledge has its origin in, and is    limited by, experience, the Continental rationalists thought    that knowledge has its foundation in the scrutiny and orderly    deployment of ideas and principles proper to the mind itself.    The rationalists did not spurn experience as is sometimes    mistakenly alleged; they were thoroughly immersed in the rapid    developments of the new science, and in some cases led those    developments. They held, however, that experience alone, while    useful in practical matters, provides an inadequate foundation    for genuine knowledge.  <\/p>\n<p>    The fact that Continental rationalism and British    empiricism are retrospectively applied terms does not mean    that the distinction that they signify is anachronistic.    Leibnizs New Essays on Human Understanding, for    instance, outlines stark contrasts between his own way of    thinking and that of Locke, which track many features of the    rationalist\/empiricist distinction as it tends to be applied in    retrospect. There was no rationalist creed or manifesto to    which Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz all subscribed (nor, for    that matter, was there an empiricist one). Nevertheless, with    due caution, it is possible to use the Continental    rationalism category (and its empiricist counterpart) to    highlight significant points of convergence in the philosophies    of Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, inter alia. These    include: (1) a doctrine of innate ideas; (2) the application of    mathematical method to philosophy; and (3) the use of a    priori principles in the construction of substance-based    metaphysical systems.  <\/p>\n<p>    According to the Historisches Worterbuch der    Philosophie, the word rationaliste appears in    16th century France, as early as 1539, in opposition    to empirique. In his New Organon, first published in    1620 (in Latin), Francis Bacon juxtaposes    rationalism and empiricism in memorable terms:  <\/p>\n<p>    Those who have treated of the sciences have been either    empiricists [Empirici] or dogmatists [Dogmatici].    Empiricists [Empirici], like ants, simply accumulate and    use; Rationalists [Rationales], like spiders, spin webs    from themselves; the way of the bee is in between: it takes    material from the flowers of the garden and the field; but it    has the ability to convert and digest them. (The New    Organon, p. 79; Spedding, 1, 201)  <\/p>\n<p>    Bacons association of rationalists with dogmatists in this    passage foreshadows Kants use of the term dogmatisch    in reference, especially, to the Wolffian brand of rationalist    philosophy prevalent in 18th century Germany.    Nevertheless, Bacons use of rationales does not refer    to Continental rationalism, which developed only after the    New Organon, but rather to the Scholastic philosophy    that dominated the medieval period. Moreover, while Bacon is,    in retrospect, often considered the father of modern    empiricism, the above-quoted passage shows him no friendlier to    the empirici than to the rationales. Thus,    Bacons juxtaposition of rationalism and empiricism should not    be confused with the distinction as it develops over the course    of the 17th and 18th centuries, although    his imagery is certainly suggestive.  <\/p>\n<p>    The distinction appears in an influential form as the backdrop    to Kants critical philosophy (which is often loosely    understood as a kind of synthesis of certain aspects of    Continental rationalism and British empiricism) at the end of    the 18th century. However, it was not until the time    of Hegel in the first half of the 19th century that    the terms rationalism and empiricism were applied to    separating the figures of the 17th and    18th centuries into contrasting epistemological    camps in the fashion with which we are familiar today. In his    Lectures on the History of Philosophy, Hegel describes    an opposition between a priori thought, on the one    hand, according to which the determinations which should be    valid for thought should be taken from thought itself, and, on    the other hand, the determination that we must begin and end    and think, etc., from experience. He describes this as the    opposition between Rationalismus and    Empirismus (Werke 20, 121).  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps the best recognized and most commonly made distinction    between rationalists and empiricists concerns the question of    the source of ideas. Whereas rationalists tend to think (with    some exceptions discussed below) that some ideas, at least,    such as the idea of God, are innate, empiricists hold that all    ideas come from experience. Although the rationalists tend to    be remembered for their positive doctrine concerning innate    ideas, their assertions are matched by a rejection of the    notion that all ideas can be accounted for on the basis of    experience alone. In some Continental rationalists, especially    in Spinoza, the negative doctrine is more apparent than the    positive. The distinction is worth bearing in mind, in order to    avoid the very false impression that the rationalists held to    innate ideas because the empiricist alternative had not come    along yet. (In general, the British empiricists came after the    rationalists.) The Aristotelian doctrine, nihil in    intellectu nisi prius in sensu (nothing in the intellect    unless first in the senses), had been dominant for centuries,    and it was in reaction against this that the rationalists    revived in modified form the contrasting Platonic doctrine of    innate ideas.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes distinguishes between three kinds of ideas:    adventitious (adventitiae), factitious (factae),    and innate (innatae). As an example of an adventitious    idea, Descartes gives the common idea of the sun (yellow,    bright, round) as it is perceived through the senses. As an    example of a factitious idea, Descartes cites the idea of the    sun constructed via astronomical reasoning (vast, gaseous    body). According to Descartes, all ideas which represent true,    immutable, and eternal essences are innate. Innate ideas, for    Descartes, include the idea of God, the mind, and mathematical    truths, such as the fact that it pertains to the nature of a    triangle that its three angles equal two right angles.  <\/p>\n<p>    By conceiving some ideas as innate, Descartes does not mean    that children are born with fully actualized conceptions of,    for example, triangles and their properties. This is a common    misconception of the rationalist doctrine of innate ideas.    Descartes strives to correct it in Comments on a Certain    Broadsheet, where he compares the innateness of ideas in    the mind to the tendency which some babies are born with to    contract certain diseases: it is not so much that the babies    of such families suffer from these diseases in their mothers    womb, but simply that they are born with a certain faculty or    tendency to contract them (CSM I, 304). In other words, innate    ideas exist in the mind potentially, as tendencies; they are    then actualized by means of active thought under certain    circumstances, such as seeing a triangular figure.  <\/p>\n<p>    At various points, Descartes defends his doctrine of innate    ideas against philosophers (Hobbes, Gassendi, and Regius,    inter alia) who hold that all ideas enter the mind    through the senses, and that there are no ideas apart from    images. Descartes is relatively consistent on his reasons for    thinking that some ideas, at least, must be innate. His    principal line of argument proceeds by showing that there are    certain ideas, for example, the idea of a triangle, that    cannot be either adventitious or factitious; since ideas    are either adventitious, factitious, or innate, by process of    elimination, such ideas must be innate.  <\/p>\n<p>    Take Descartes favorite example of the idea of a triangle. The    argument that the idea of a triangle cannot be adventitious    proceeds roughly as follows. A triangle is composed of straight    lines. However, straight lines never enter our mind via the    senses, since when we examine straight lines under a magnifying    lens, they turn out to be wavy or irregular in some way. Since    we cannot derive the idea of straight lines from the senses, we    cannot derive the idea of a true triangle, which is made up of    straight lines, through the senses. Sometimes Descartes makes    the point in slightly different terms by insisting that there    is no similarity between the corporeal motions of the sense    organs and the ideas formed in the mind on the occasion of    those motions (CSM I, 304; CSMK III, 187). One such    dissimilarity, which is particularly striking, is the contrast    between the particularity of all corporeal motions and the    universality that pure ideas can attain when conjoined to form    necessary truths. Descartes makes this point in clear terms to    Regius:  <\/p>\n<p>    I would like our author to tell me what the corporeal motion is    that is capable of forming some common notion to the effect    that things which are equal to a third thing are equal to each    other, or any other he cares to take. For all such motions are    particular, whereas the common notions are universal and bear    no affinity with, or relation to, the motions. (CSM I, 304-5)  <\/p>\n<p>    Next, Descartes has to show that the idea of a triangle is not    factitious. This is where the doctrine of true and immutable    natures comes in. For Descartes, if, for example, the idea    that the three angles of a triangle are equal to two right    angles were his own invention, it would be mutable, like the    idea of a gold mountain, which can be changed at whim into the    idea of a silver mountain. Instead, when Descartes thinks about    his idea of a triangle, he is able to discover eternal    properties of it that are not mutable in this way; hence, they    are not invented (CSMK III, 184).  <\/p>\n<p>    Since, therefore, the triangle can be neither adventitious nor    factitious, it must be innate; that is to say, the mind has an    innate tendency or power to form this idea from its own purely    intellectual resources when prompted to do so.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes insistence that there is no similarity between the    corporeal motions of our sense organs and the ideas formed in    the mind on the occasion of those motions raises a difficulty    for understanding how any ideas could be adventitious. Since    none of our ideas have any similarity to the corporeal motions    of the sense organs  even the idea of motion itself  it seems    that no ideas can in fact have their origin in a source    external to the mind. The reason that we have an idea of heat    in the presence of fire, for instance, is not, then, because    the idea is somehow transmitted by the fire. Rather, Descartes    thinks that God designed us in such a way that we form the idea    of heat on the occasion of certain corporeal motions in our    sense organs (and we form other sensory ideas on the occasion    of other corporeal motions). Thus, there is a sense in which,    for Descartes, all ideas are innate, and his tripartite    division between kinds of ideas becomes difficult to maintain.  <\/p>\n<p>    Per his so-called doctrine of parallelism, Spinoza conceives    the mind and the body as one and the same thing, conceived    under different attributes (to wit, thought and extension).    (See Benedict de    Spinoza: Metaphysics.) As a result, Spinoza denies that    there is any causal interaction between mind and body, and so    Spinoza denies that any ideas are caused by bodily change. Just    as bodies can be affected only by other bodies, so ideas can be    affected only by other ideas. This does not mean, however, that    all ideas are innate for Spinoza, as they very clearly are for    Leibniz (see below). Just as the body can be conceived to be    affected by external objects conceived under the attribute of    extension (that is, as bodies), so the mind can (as it were, in    parallel) be conceived to be affected by the same objects    conceived under the attribute of thought (that is, as ideas).    Ideas gained in this way, from encounters with external objects    (conceived as ideas) constitutes knowledge of the first kind,    or imagination, for Spinoza, and all such ideas are    inadequate, or in other words, confused and lacking order for    the intellect. Adequate ideas, on the other hand, which can    be formed via Spinozas second and third kinds of knowledge    (reason and intuitive knowledge, respectively), and which are    clear and distinct and have order for the intellect, are not    gained through chance encounters with external objects; rather,    adequate ideas can be explained in terms of resources intrinsic    to the mind. (For more on Spinozas three kinds of knowledge    and the distinction between adequate and inadequate ideas, see    Benedict de Spinoza:    Epistemology.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The mind, for Spinoza, just by virtue of having ideas, which is    its essence, has ideas of what Spinoza calls common notions,    or in other words, those things which are equally in the part    and in the whole. Examples of common notions include motion    and rest, extension, and indeed God. Take extension for    example. To think of any body  however small or however large     is to have a perfectly complete idea of extension. So,    insofar as the mind has any idea of body (and, for    Spinoza, the human mind is the idea of the human body, and so    always has ideas of body), it has a perfectly adequate idea of    extension. The same can be said for motion and rest. The same    can also be said for God, except that God is not equally in the    part and in the whole of extension only, but of all things.    Spinoza treats these common notions as principles of reasoning.    Anything that can be deduced on their basis is also adequate.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is not clear if Spinozas common notions should be    considered innate ideas. Spinoza speaks of active and passive    ideas, and adequate and inadequate ideas. He associates the    former with the intellect and the latter with the imagination,    but innate idea is not an explicit category in Spinozas    theory of ideas as it is in Descartes and also Leibnizs.    Common notions are not in the mind independent of the minds    relation with its object (the body); nevertheless, since it is    the minds nature to be the idea of the body, it is part of the    minds nature to have common notions. Commentators differ over    the question of whether Spinoza had a positive doctrine of    innate ideas; it is clear, however, that he denied that all    ideas come about through encounters with external objects;    moreover, he believed that those ideas which do come about    through encounters with external objects are of an inferior    epistemic value than those produced through the minds own    intrinsic resources; this is enough to put him in the    rationalist camp on the question of the origin of ideas.  <\/p>\n<p>    Of the three great rationalists, Leibniz propounded the most    thoroughgoing doctrine of innate ideas. For Leibniz, all ideas    are strictly speaking innate. In a general and relatively    straightforward sense, this viewpoint is a direct consequence    of Leibnizs conception of individual substance. According to    Leibniz, each substance is a world apart, independent of    everything outside of itself except for God. Thus all our    phenomena, that is to say, all the things that can ever happen    to us, are only the results of our own being (L, 312); or, in    Leibnizs famous phrase from the Monadology, monads    have no windows, meaning there is no way for sensory data to    enter monads from the outside. In this more general sense,    then, to give an explanation for Leibnizs doctrine of innate    ideas would be to explain his conception of individual    substance and the arguments and considerations which motivate    it. (See Section 4, b, iii, below for a discussion of Leibnizs    conception of substance; see also Gottfried Leibniz:    Metaphysics.) This would be to circumvent the issues and    questions which are typically at the heart of the debate over    the existence of innate ideas, which concern the extent to    which certain kinds of perceptions, ideas, and propositions can    be accounted for on the basis of experience. Although Leibnizs    more general reasons for embracing innate ideas stem from his    unique brand of substance metaphysics, Leibniz does enter into    the debate over innate ideas, as it were, addressing the more    specific questions regarding the source of given kinds of    ideas, most notably in his dialogic engagement with Lockes    philosophy, New Essays on Human Understanding.  <\/p>\n<p>    Due to Leibnizs conception of individual substance, nothing    actually comes from a sensory experience, where a sensory    experience is understood to involve direct concourse with    things outside of the mind. However, Leibniz does have a means    for distinguishing between sensations and purely intellectual    thoughts within the framework of his substance metaphysics. For    Leibniz, although each monad or individual substance    expresses (or represents) the entire universe from its own    unique point of view, it does so with a greater or lesser    degree of clarity and distinctness. Bare monads, such as    comprise minerals and vegetation, express the rest of the world    only in the most confused fashion. Rational minds, by contrast,    have a much greater proportion of clear and distinct    perceptions, and so express more of the world clearly and    distinctly than do bare monads. When an individual substance    attains a more perfect expression of the world (in the sense    that it attains a less confused expression of the world), it is    said to act; when its expression becomes more confused, it is    said to be acted upon. Using this distinction, Leibniz is able    to reconcile the terms of his philosophy with everyday    conceptions. Although, strictly speaking, no monad is acted    upon by any other, nor acts upon any other directly, it is    possible to speak this way, just as, Leibniz says, Copernicans    can still speak of the motion of the sun for everyday purposes,    while understanding that the sun does not in fact move. It is    in this sense that Leibniz enters into the debate concerning    the origin of our ideas.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz distinguishes between ideas (ides) and    thoughts (penses) (or, sometimes, notions    (notions) or concepts (conceptus)). Ideas exist    in the soul whether we actually perceive them or are aware of    them or not. It is these ideas that Leibniz contends are    innate. Thoughts, by contrast is Leibnizs designation for    ideas which we actually form or conceive at any given time. In    this sense, thoughts can be formed on the basis of a sensory    experience (with the above caveats regarding the meaning a    sensory experience can have in Leibnizs thought) or on the    basis of an internal experience, or a reflection. Leibniz    alternatively characterizes our ideas as aptitudes,    preformations, and as dispositions to represent something    when the occasion for thinking of it arises. On multiple    occasions, Leibniz uses the metaphor of the veins present in    marble to illustrate his understanding of innate ideas. Just as    the veins dispose the sculptor to shape the marble in certain    ways, so do our ideas dispose us to have certain thoughts on    the occasion of certain experiences.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz rejects the view that the mind cannot have ideas    without being aware that it has them. (See Gottfried Leibniz:    Philosophy of Mind.) Much of the disagreement between Locke    and Leibniz on the question of innate ideas turns on this    point, since Locke (at least as Leibniz represents him in the    New Essays) is not able to make any sense out of the    notion that the mind can have ideas without being aware of    them. Much of Leibnizs defense of his innate ideas doctrine    takes the form of replying to Lockes charge that it is absurd    to hold that the mind could think (that is, have ideas) without    being aware of it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz marshals several considerations in support of his view    that the mind is not always aware of its ideas. The fact that    we can store many more ideas in our understanding than we can    be aware of at any given time is one. Leibniz also points to    the phenomenology of attention; we do not attend to everything    in our perceptual field at any given time; rather we focus on    certain things at the expense of others. To convey a sense of    what it might be like for the mind to have perceptions and    ideas in a dreamless sleep, Leibniz asks the reader to imagine    subtracting our attention from perceptual experience; since we    can distinguish between what is attended to and what is not,    subtracting attention does not eliminate perception altogether.  <\/p>\n<p>    While such considerations suggest the possibility of    innate ideas, they do not in and of themselves prove that    innate ideas are necessary to explain the full scope of human    cognition. The empiricist tends to think that if innate ideas    are not necessary to explain cognition, then they should be    abandoned as gratuitous metaphysical constructs. Leibniz does    have arguments designed to show that innate ideas are needed    for a full account of human cognition.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the first place, Leibniz recalls favorably the famous    scenario from Platos Meno where Socrates teaches a    slave boy to grasp abstract mathematical truths merely by    asking questions. The anecdote is supposed to indicate that    mathematical truths can be generated by the mind alone, in the    absence of particular sensory experiences, if only the mind is    prompted to discover what it contains within itself. Concerning    mathematics and geometry, Leibniz remarks: one could construct    these sciences in ones study and even with ones eyes closed,    without learning from sight or even from touch any of the    needed truths (NE, 77). So, on these grounds, Leibniz contends    that without innate ideas, we could not explain the sorts of    cognitive capacities exhibited in the mathematical sciences.  <\/p>\n<p>    A second argument concerns our capacity to grasp certain    necessary or eternal truths. Leibniz says that necessary truths    can be suggested, justified, and confirmed by experience, but    that they can be proved only by the understanding alone (NE,    80). Leibniz does not explain this point further, but he seems    to have in mind the point later made by both Hume and Kant (to    different ends), that experience on its own can never account    for the kind of certainty that we find in mathematical and    metaphysical truths. For Leibniz, if it can be granted that we    can be certain of propositions in mathematics and metaphysics     and Leibniz thinks this must be granted  recourse must be had    to principles innate to the mind in order to explain our    ability to be certain of such things.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is worth noting briefly the position of Nicolas Malebranche    on innate ideas, since Malebranche is often considered among    the rationalists, yet he denied the doctrine of innate ideas.    Malebranches reasons for rejecting innate ideas were anything    but empiricist in nature, however. His leading objection stems    from the infinity of ideas that the mind is able to form    independently of the senses; as an example, Malebranche cites    the infinite number of triangles of which the mind could in    principle, albeit not in practice, form ideas. Unlike Descartes    and Leibniz, who view innate ideas as tendencies or    dispositions to form certain thoughts under certain    circumstances, Malebranche understands them as fully formed    entities that would have to exist somehow in the mind were they    to exist there innately. Given this conception, Malebranche    finds it unlikely that God would have created so many things    along with the mind of man (The Search After Truth, p.    227). Since God already contains the ideas of all things within    Himself, Malebranche thinks that it would be much more    economical if God were simply to reveal to us the ideas of    things that already exist in him rather than placing an    infinity of ideas in each human mind. Malebranches tenet that    we see all things in God thus follows upon the principle that    God always acts in the simplest ways. Malebranche finds further    support for this doctrine from the fact that it places human    minds in a position of complete dependence on God. Thus, if    Malebranches rejection of innate ideas distinguishes him from    other rationalists, it does so not from an empiricist    standpoint, but rather because of the extent to which his    position on ideas is theologically motivated.  <\/p>\n<p>    In one sense, what it means to be a rationalist is to model    philosophy on mathematics, and, in particular, geometry. This    means that the rationalist begins with definitions and    intuitively self-evident axioms and proceeds thence to deduce a    philosophical system of knowledge that is both certain and    complete. This at least is the goal and (with some    qualifications to be explored below) the claim. In no work of    rationalist philosophy is this procedure more apparent than in    Spinozas Ethics, laid out famously in the geometrical    manner (more geometrico). Nevertheless, Descartes main    works (and those of Leibniz as well), although not as overtly    more geometrico as Spinozas Ethics, are also    modelled after geometry, and it is Descartes celebrated    methodological program that first introduces mathematics as a    model for philosophy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps Descartes clearest and most well-known statement of    mathematics role as paradigm appears in the Discourse on    the Method:  <\/p>\n<p>    Those long chains of very simple and easy reasonings, which    geometers customarily use to arrive at their most difficult    demonstrations, had given me occasion to suppose that all the    things which can fall under human knowledge are interconnected    in the same way. (CSM I, 120)  <\/p>\n<p>    However, Descartes promotion of mathematics as a model for    philosophy dates back to his early, unfinished work, Rules    for the Direction of the Mind. It is in this work that    Descartes first outlines his standards for certainty that have    since come to be so closely associated with him and with the    rationalist enterprise more generally.  <\/p>\n<p>    In Rule 2, Descartes declares that henceforth only what is    certain should be valued and counted as knowledge. This means    the rejection of all merely probable reasoning, which Descartes    associates with the philosophy of the Schools. Descartes admits    that according to this criterion, only arithmetic and geometry    thus far count as knowledge. But Descartes does not conclude    that only in these disciplines is it possible to attain    knowledge. According to Descartes, the reason that certainty    has eluded philosophers has as much to do with the disdain that    philosophers have for the simplest truths as it does with the    subject matter. Admittedly, the objects of arithmetic and    geometry are especially pure and simple, or, as Descartes will    later say, clear and distinct. Nevertheless, certainty can be    attained in philosophy as well, provided the right method is    followed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes distinguishes between two ways of achieving    knowledge: through experience and through deduction [] [W]e    must note that while our experiences of things are often    deceptive, the deduction or pure inference of one thing from    another can never be performed wrongly by an intellect which is    in the least degree rational [] (CSM I, 12). This is a clear    statement of Descartes methodological rationalism. Building up    knowledge through accumulated experience can only ever lead to    the sort of probable knowledge that Descartes finds lacking.    Pure inference, by contrast, can never go astray, at least    when it is conducted by right reason. Of course, the truth    value of a deductive chain is only as good as the first truths,    or axioms, whose truth the deductions preserve. It is for this    reason that Descartes method relies on intuition as well as    deduction. Intuition provides the first principles of a    deductive system, for Descartes. Intuition differs from    deduction insofar as it is not discursive. Intuition grasps its    object in an immediate way. In its broadest outlines,    Descartes method is just the use of intuition and deduction in    the orderly attainment and preservation of certainty.  <\/p>\n<p>    In subsequent Rules, Descartes goes on to elaborate a more    specific methodological program, which involves reducing    complicated matters step by step to simpler, intuitively    graspable truths, and then using those simple truths as    principles from which to deduce knowledge of more complicated    matters. It is generally accepted by scholars that this more    specific methodological program reappears in a more iconic form    in the Discourse on the Method as the four rules for    gaining knowledge outlined in Part 2. There is some doubt as to    the extent to which this more specific methodological program    actually plays any role in Descartes mature philosophy as it    is expressed in the Meditations and Principles    (see Garber 2001, chapter 2). There can be no doubt, however,    that the broader methodological guidelines outlined above were    a permanent feature of Descartes thought.  <\/p>\n<p>    In response to a request to cast his Meditations in the    geometrical style (that is, in the style of Euclids    Elements), Descartes distinguishes between two aspects    of the geometrical style: order and method, explaining:  <\/p>\n<p>    The order consists simply in this. The items which are put    forward first must be known entirely without the aid of what    comes later; and the remaining items must be arranged in such a    way that their demonstration depends solely on what has gone    before. I did try to follow this order very carefully in my    Meditations [] (CSM II, 110)  <\/p>\n<p>    Elsewhere, Descartes contrasts this order, which he calls the    order of reasons, with another order, which he associates    with scholasticism, and which he calls the order of    subject-matter (see CSMK III, 163). What Descartes understands    as geometrical order or the order of reasons is just the    procedure of starting with what is most simple, and proceeding    in a step-wise, deliberate fashion to deduce consequences from    there. Descartes order is governed by what can be clearly and    distinctly intuited, and by what can be clearly and distinctly    inferred from such self-evident intuitions (rather than by a    concern for organizing the discussion into neat topical    categories per the order of subject-matter)  <\/p>\n<p>    As for method, Descartes distinguishes between analysis and    synthesis. For Descartes, analysis and synthesis represent    different methods of demonstrating a conclusion or set of    conclusions. Analysis exhibits the path by which the conclusion    comes to be grasped. As such, it can be thought of as the    order of discovery or order of knowledge.    Synthesis, by contrast, wherein conclusions are deduced from a    series of definitions, postulates, and axioms, as in Euclids    Elements, for instance, follows not the order in which    things are discovered, but rather the order that things bear to    one another in reality. As such, it can be thought of as the    order of being. God, for example, is prior to the human    mind in the order of being (since God created the human mind),    and so in the synthetic mode of demonstration the existence of    God is demonstrated before the existence of the human mind.    However, knowledge of ones own mind precedes knowledge of God,    at least in Descartes philosophy, and so in the analytic mode    of demonstration the cogito is demonstrated before the    existence of God. Descartes preference is for analysis,    because he thinks that it is superior in helping the reader to    discover the things for herself, and so in bringing about the    intellectual conversion which it is the Meditations    goal to effectuate in the minds of its readers. According to    Descartes, while synthesis, in laying out demonstrations    systematically, is useful in preempting dissent, it is inferior    in engaging the mind of the reader.  <\/p>\n<p>    Two primary distinctions can be made in summarizing Descartes    methodology: (1) the distinction between the order of reasons    and the order of subject-matter; and (2) the analysis\/synthesis    distinction. With respect to the first distinction, the great    Continental rationalists are united. All adhere to the order of    reasons, as we have described it above, rather than the order    of subject-matter. Even though the rationalists disagree about    how exactly to interpret the content of the order of reasons,    their common commitment to following an order of reasons is a    hallmark of their rationalism. Although there are points of    convergence with respect to the second, analysis\/synthesis    distinction, there are also clear points of divergence, and    this distinction can be useful in highlighting the range of    approaches the rationalists adopt to mathematical methodology.  <\/p>\n<p>    Of the great Continental rationalists, Spinoza is the most    closely associated with mathematical method due to the striking    presentation of his magnum opus, the Ethics, (as well as    his presentation of Descartes Principles), in    geometrical fashion. The fact that Spinoza is the only major    rationalist to present his main work more geometrico    might create the impression that he is the only philosopher to    employ mathematical method in constructing and elaborating his    philosophical system. This impression is mistaken, since both    Descartes and Leibniz also apply mathematical method to    philosophy. Nevertheless, there are differences between    Spinozas employment of mathematical method and that of    Descartes (and Leibniz). The most striking, of course, is the    form of Spinozas Ethics. Each part begins with a series    of definitions, axioms, and postulates and proceeds thence to    deduce propositions, the demonstrations of which refer back to    the definitions, axioms, postulates and previously demonstrated    propositions on which they depend. Of course, this is just the    method of presenting findings that Descartes in the Second    Replies dubbed synthesis. For Descartes, analysis and    synthesis differ only in pedagogical respects: whereas analysis    is better for helping the reader discover the truth for    herself, synthesis is better in compelling agreement.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is some evidence that Spinozas motivations for employing    synthesis were in part pedagogical. In Lodewijk Meyers preface    to Spinozas Principles of Cartesian Philosophy, Meyer    uses Descartes Second Replies distinction between analysis and    synthesis to explain the motivation for the work. Meyer    criticizes Descartes followers for being too uncritical in    their enthusiasm for Descartes thought, and attributes this in    part to the relative opacity of Descartes analytic mode of    presentation. Thus, for Meyer, the motivation for presenting    Descartes Principles in the synthetic manner is to make    the proofs more transparent, and thereby leave less excuse for    blind acceptance of Descartes conclusions. It is not clear to    what extent Meyers explanation of the mode of presentation of    Spinozas Principles of Cartesian Philosophy applies to    Spinozas Ethics. In the first place, although Spinoza    approved the preface, he did not author it himself. Secondly,    while such an explanation seems especially suited to a work in    which Spinozas chief goal was to present another philosophers    thought in a different form, there is no reason to assume that    it applies to the presentation of Spinozas own philosophy.    Scholars have differed on how to interpret the geometrical form    of Spinozas Ethics. However, it is generally accepted    that Spinozas use of synthesis does not merely represent a    pedagogical preference. There is reason to think that Spinozas    methodology differs from that of Descartes in a somewhat deeper    way.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is another version of the analysis\/synthesis distinction    besides Descartes that was also influential in the    17th century, that is, Hobbes version of the    distinction. Although there is little direct evidence that    Spinoza was influenced by Hobbes version of the distinction,    some scholars have claimed a connection, and, in any case, it    is useful to view Spinozas methodology in light of the    Hobbesian alternative.  <\/p>\n<p>    Synthesis and analysis are not modes of demonstrating findings    that have already been made, for Hobbes, as they are for    Descartes, but rather complementary means of generating    findings; in particular, they are forms of causal reasoning.    For Hobbes, analysis is reasoning from effects to causes;    synthesis is reasoning in the other direction, from causes to    effects. For example, by analysis, we infer that geometrical    objects are constructed via the motions of points and lines and    surfaces. Once motion has been established as the principle of    geometry, it is then possible, via synthesis, to construct the    possible effects of motion, and thereby, to make new    discoveries in geometry. According to the Hobbesian schema,    then, synthesis is not merely a mode of presenting truths, but    a means of generating and discovering truths. (For Hobbes    method, see The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of    Malmesbury, vol. 1, ch. 6.) There is reason to think that    synthesis had this kind of significance for Spinoza, as well     as a means of discovery, not merely presentation. Spinozas    methodology, and, in particular, his theory of definitions,    bear this out  <\/p>\n<p>    Spinozas method begins with reflection on the nature of a    given true idea. The given true idea serves as a standard    by which the mind learns the distinction between true and false    ideas, and also between the intellect and the imagination, and    how to direct itself properly in the discovery of true ideas.    The correct formulation of definitions emerges as the most    important factor in directing the mind properly in the    discovery of true ideas. To illustrate his conception of a good    definition, Spinoza contrasts two definitions of a circle. On    one definition, a circle is a figure in which all the lines    from the center to the circumference are equal. On another, a    circle is the figure described by the rotation of a line around    one of its ends, which is fixed. For Spinoza, the second    definition is superior. Whereas the first definition gives only    a property of the circle, the second provides the cause from    which all of the properties can be deduced. Hence, what makes a    definition a good definition, for Spinoza, is its capacity to    serve as a basis for the discovery of truths about the thing.    The circle, of course, is just an example. For Spinoza, the    method is perfected when it arrives at a true idea of the first    cause of all things, that is, God. Only the method is perfected    with a true idea of God, however, not the philosophy. The    philosophy itself begins with a true idea of God, since the    philosophy consists in deducing the consequences from a true    idea of God. With this in mind, the definition of God is of    paramount importance. In correspondence, Spinoza compares    contrasting definitions of God, explaining that he chose the    one which expresses the efficient cause from which all of the    properties of God can be deduced.  <\/p>\n<p>    In this light, it becomes clear that the geometrical    presentation of Spinozas philosophy is not merely a pedagogic    preference. The definitions that appear at the outset of the    five parts of the Ethics do not serve merely to make    explicit what might otherwise have remained only implicit in    Descartes analytic mode of presentation. Rather, key    definitions, such as the definition of God, are principles that    underwrite the development of the system. As a result, Hobbes    conception of the analysis\/synthesis distinction throws an    important light on Spinozas procedure. There is a movement of    analysis in arriving at the causal definition of God from the    preliminary given true idea. Then there is a movement of    synthesis in deducing consequences from that causal definition.    Of course, Descartes analysis\/synthesis distinction still    applies, since, after all, Spinozas system is presented in the    synthetic manner in the Ethics. But the geometrical    style of presentation is not merely a pedagogical device in    Spinozas case. It is also a clue to the nature of his system.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz is openly critical of Descartes distinction between    analysis and synthesis, writing, Those who think that the    analytic presentation consists in revealing the origin of a    discovery, the synthetic in keeping it concealed, are in error    (L, 233). This comment is aimed at Descartes formulation of    the distinction in the Second Replies. Leibniz is explicit    about his adherence to the viewpoint that seems to be implied    by Spinozas methodology: synthesis is itself a means of    discovering truth no less than analysis, not merely a mode of    presentation. Leibnizs understanding of analysis and synthesis    is closer to the Hobbesian conception, which views analysis and    synthesis as different directions of causal reasoning: from    effects to causes (analysis) and from causes to effects    (synthesis). Leibniz formulates the distinction in his own    terms as follows:  <\/p>\n<p>    Synthesis is achieved when we begin from principles and run    through truths in good order, thus discovering certain    progressions and setting up tables, or sometimes general    formulas, in which the answers to emerging questions can later    be discovered. Analysis goes back to the principles in order to    solve the given problems only [] (L, 232)  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz thus conceives synthesis and analysis in relation to    principles.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz lays great stress on the importance of establishing the    possibility of ideas, that is to say, establishing that ideas    do not involve contradiction, and this applies a    fortiori to first principles. For Leibniz, the Cartesian    criterion of clear and distinct perception does not suffice for    establishing the possibility of an idea. Leibniz is critical,    in particular, of Descartes ontological argument on the    grounds that Descartes neglects to demonstrate the possibility    of the idea of a most perfect being on which the argument    depends. It is possible to mistakenly assume that an idea is    possible, when in reality it is contradictory. Leibniz gives    the example of a wheel turning at the fastest possible rate. It    might at first seem that this idea is legitimate, but if a    spoke of the wheel were extended beyond the rim, the end of the    spoke would move faster than a nail in the rim itself,    revealing a contradiction in the original notion.  <\/p>\n<p>    For Leibniz, there are two ways of establishing the possibility    of an idea: by experience (a posteriori) and by reducing    concepts via analysis down to a relation of identity (a    priori). Leibniz credits mathematicians and geometers with    pushing the practice of demonstrating what would otherwise    normally be taken for granted the furthest. For example, in    Meditations on Knowledge, Truth, and Ideas, Leibniz    writes, That brilliant genius Pascal agrees entirely with    these principles when he says, in his famous dissertation on    the geometrical spirit [] that it is the task of the geometer    to define all terms though ever so little obscure and to prove    all truths though little doubtful (L, 294). Leibniz credits    his own doctrine of the possibility of ideas with clarifying    exactly what it means for something to be beyond doubt and    obscurity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz describes the result of the reduction of concepts to    identity variously as follows: when the thing is resolved into    simple primitive notions understood in themselves (L, 231);    when every ingredient that enters into a distinct concept is    itself known distinctly; when analysis is carried through to    the end (L, 292). Since, for Leibniz, all true ideas can be    reduced to simple identities, it is, in principle, possible to    derive all truths via a movement of synthesis from such simple    identities in the way that mathematicians produce systems of    knowledge on the basis of their basic definitions and axioms.    This kind of a priori knowledge of the world is    restricted to God, however. According to Leibniz, it is only    possible for our finite minds to have this kind of knowledge     which Leibniz calls intuitive or adequate  in the case of    things which do not depend on experience, or what Leibniz also    calls truths of reason, which include abstract logical and    metaphysical truths, and mathematical propositions. In the case    of truths of fact, by contrast, with the exception of    immediately graspable facts of experience, such as, I think,    and Various things are thought by me, we are restricted to    formulating hypotheses to explain the phenomena of sensory    experience, and such knowledge of the world can, for us, only    ever achieve the status of hypothesis, though our hypothetical    knowledge can be continually improved and refined. (See Section    5, c, below for a discussion of hypotheses in Leibniz.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibniz is in line with his rationalist predecessors in    emphasizing the importance of proper order in philosophizing.    Leibnizs emphasis on establishing the possibility of ideas    prior to using them in demonstrating propositions could be    understood as a refinement of the geometrical order that    Descartes established over against the order of subject-matter.    Leibniz emphasizes order in another connection vis--vis Locke.    As Leibniz makes clear in his New Essays, one of the    clearest points of disagreement between him and Locke is on the    question of innate ideas. In preliminary comments that Leibniz    drew up upon first reading Lockes Essay, and which he    sent to Locke via Burnett, Leibniz makes the following point    regarding philosophical order:  <\/p>\n<p>    Concerning the question whether there are ideas and truths born    with us, I do not find it absolutely necessary for the    beginnings, nor for the practice of the art of thinking, to    answer it; whether they all come to us from outside, or they    come from within us, we will reason correctly provided that we    keep in mind what I said above, and that we proceed with order    and without prejudice. The question of the origin of our ideas    and of our maxims is not preliminary in philosophy, and it is    necessary to have made great progress in order to resolve it.    (Philosophische Schriften, vol. 5, pp. 15-16)  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibnizs allusion to what he said above refers to remarks    regarding the establishment of the possibility of ideas via    experience and the principle of identity. This passage makes it    clear that, from Leibnizs point of view, the order in which    Locke philosophizes is quite misguided, since Locke begins with    a question that should only be addressed after great progress    has already been made, particularly with respect to the    criteria for distinguishing between true and false ideas, and    for establishing legitimate philosophical principles.    Empiricists generally put much less emphasis on the order of    philosophizing, since they do not aim to reason from first    principles grasped a priori.  <\/p>\n<p>    A fundamental tenet of rationalism  perhaps the    fundamental tenet  is that the world is intelligible. The    intelligibility tenet means that everything that happens in the    world happens in an orderly, lawful, rational manner, and that    the mind, in principle, if not always in practice, is able to    reproduce the interconnections of things in thought provided    that it adheres to certain rules of right reasoning. The    intelligibility of the world is sometimes couched in terms of a    denial of brute facts, where a brute fact is something that    just is the case, that is, something that obtains without any    reason or explanation (even in principle). Many of the a    priori principles associated with rationalism can be    understood either as versions or implications of the principle    of intelligibility. As such, the principle of intelligibility    functions as a basic principle of rationalism. It appears under    various guises in the great rationalist systems and is used to    generate contrasting philosophical systems. Indeed, one of the    chief criticisms of rationalism is the fact that its principles    can consistently be used to generate contradictory conclusions    and systems of thought. The clearest and best known statement    of the intelligibility of the world is Leibnizs principle    of sufficient reason. Some scholars have recently    emphasized this principle as the key to understanding    rationalism (see Della Rocca 2008, chapter 1).  <\/p>\n<p>    The intelligibility principle raises some classic philosophical    problems. Chief among these is a problem of question-begging or    circularity. The task of proving that the world is intelligible    seems to have to rely on some of the very principles of    reasoning in question. In the 17th century,    discussion of this fundamental problem centered around the    so-called Cartesian circle. The problem is still debated by    scholars of 17th century thought today. The    viability of the rationalist enterprise seems to depend, at    least in part, on a satisfactory answer to this problem.  <\/p>\n<p>    The most important rational principle in Descartes philosophy,    the principle which does a great deal of the work in generating    its details, is the principle according to which whatever is    clearly and distinctly perceived to be true is true. This    principle means that if we can form any clear and    distinct ideas, then we will be able to trust that they    accurately represent their objects, and give us certain    knowledge of reality. Descartes clear and distinct ideas    doctrine is central to his conception of the worlds    intelligibility, and indeed, it is central to the rationalists    conception of the worlds intelligibility more broadly.    Although Spinoza and Leibniz both work to refine understanding    of what it is to have clear and distinct ideas, they both    subscribe to the view that the mind, when directed properly, is    able to accurately represent certain basic features of reality,    such as the nature of substance.  <\/p>\n<p>    For Descartes, it cannot be taken for granted from the outset    that what we clearly and distinctly perceive to be true is in    fact true. It is possible to entertain the doubt that an    all-powerful deceiving being fashioned the mind so that it is    deceived even in those things it perceives clearly and    distinctly. Nevertheless, it is only possible to entertain this    doubt when we are not having clear and distinct perceptions.    When we are perceiving things clearly and distinctly, their    truth is undeniable. Moreover, we can use our capacity for    clear and distinct perceptions to demonstrate that the mind was    not fashioned by an all-powerful deceiving being, but rather by    an all-powerful benevolent being who would not fashion    us so as to be deceived even when using our minds properly.    Having proved the existence of an all-powerful benevolent being    qua creator of our minds, we can no longer entertain any doubts    regarding our clear and distinct ideas even when we are not    presently engaged in clear and distinct perceptions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes legitimation of clear and distinct perception via    his proof of a benevolent God raises notorious interpretive    challenges. Scholars disagree about how to resolve the problem    of the Cartesian circle. However, there is general consensus    that Descartes procedure is not, in fact, guilty of vicious,    logical circularity. In order for Descartes procedure to avoid    circularity, it is generally agreed that in some sense    clear and distinct ideas need already to be legitimate before    the proof of Gods existence. It is only in another    sense that Gods existence legitimates their truth.    Scholars disagree on how exactly to understand those different    senses, but they generally agree that there is some sense at    least in which clear and distinct ideas are self-legitimating,    or, otherwise, not in need of legitimation.  <\/p>\n<p>    That some ideas provide a basic standard of truth is a    fundamental tenet of rationalism, and undergirds all the other    rationalist principles at work in the construction of    rationalist systems of philosophy. For the rationalists, if it    cannot be taken for granted in at least some sense from the    outset that the mind is capable of discerning the difference    between truth and falsehood, then one never gets beyond    skepticism.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Continental rationalists deploy the principle of    intelligibility and subordinate rational principles derived    from it in generating much of the content of their respective    philosophical systems. In no aspect of their systems is the    application of rational principles to the generation of    philosophical content more evident and more clearly    illustrative of contrasting interpretations of these principles    than in that for which the Continental rationalists are    arguably best known: substance metaphysics.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes deploys his clear and distinct ideas doctrine in    justifying his most well-known metaphysical position: substance    dualism. The first step in Descartes demonstration of    mind-body dualism, or, in his terminology, of a real    distinction (that is, a distinction between two substances)    between mind and body is to show that while it is possible to    doubt that one has a body, it is not possible to doubt that one    is thinking. As Descartes makes clear in the Principles of    Philosophy, one of the chief upshots of his famous    cogito argument is the discovery of the distinction    between a thinking thing and a corporeal thing. The    impossibility of doubting ones existence is not the    impossibility of doubting that one is a human being with a body    with arms and legs and a head. It is the impossibility of    doubting, rather, that one doubts, perceives, dreams, imagines,    understands, wills, denies, and other modalities that Descartes    attributes to the thinking thing. It is possible to think of    oneself as a thing that thinks, and to recognize that it is    impossible to doubt that one thinks, while continuing to doubt    that one has a body with arms and legs and a head. So, the    cogito drives a preliminary wedge between mind and body.  <\/p>\n<p>    At this stage of the argument, however, Descartes has simply    established that it is possible to conceive of himself as a    thinking thing without conceiving of himself as a corporeal    thing. It remains possible that, in fact, the thinking thing is    identical with a corporeal thing, in other words, that thought    is somehow something a body can do; Descartes has yet to    establish that the epistemological distinction between his    knowledge of his mind and his knowledge of body that results    from the hyperbolic doubt translates to a metaphysical or    ontological distinction between mind and body. The move from    the epistemological distinction to the ontological distinction    proceeds via the doctrine of clear and distinct ideas. Having    established that whatever he clearly and distinctly perceives    is true, Descartes is in a position to affirm the real    distinction between mind and body.  <\/p>\n<p>    In this life, it is never possible to clearly and distinctly    perceive a mind actually separate from a body, at least in the    case of finite, created minds, because minds and bodies are    intimately unified in the composite human being. So Descartes    cannot base his proof for the real distinction of mind and body    on the clear and distinct perception that mind and body are    in fact independently existing things. Rather,    Descartes argument is based on the joint claims that (1) it is    possible to have a clear and distinct idea of thought apart    from extension and vice versa; and (2) whatever we can clearly    and distinctly understand is capable of being created by God    exactly as we clearly and distinctly understand it. Thus, the    fact that we can clearly and distinctly understand thought    apart from extension and vice versa entails that thinking    things and extended things are really distinct (in the sense    that they are distinct substances separable by God).  <\/p>\n<p>    The foregoing argument relies on certain background assumptions    which it is now necessary to explain, in particular, Descartes    conception of substance. In the Principles, Descartes    defines substance as a thing which exists in such a way as to    depend on no other thing for its existence (CSM I, 210).    Properly speaking, only God can be understood to depend on no    other thing, and so only God is a substance in the absolute    sense. Nevertheless, Descartes allows that, in a relative    sense, created things can count as substances too. A created    thing is a substance if the only thing it relies upon for its    existence is the ordinary concurrence of God (ibid.). Only    mind and body qualify as substances in this secondary sense.    Everything else is a modification or property of minds and    bodies. A second point is that, for Descartes, we do not have a    direct knowledge of substance; rather, we come to know    substance by virtue of its attributes. Thought and extension    are the attributes or properties in virtue of which we come to    know thinking and corporeal substance, or mind and body.    This point relies on the application of a key rational    principle, to wit, nothingness has no properties. For    Descartes, there cannot simply be the properties of thinking    and extension without these properties having something in    which to inhere. Thinking and extension are not just any    properties; Descartes calls them principal attributes because    they constitute the nature of their respective substances.    Other, non-essential properties, cannot be understood without    the principal attribute, but the principal attribute can be    understood without any of the non-essential properties. For    example, motion cannot be understood without extension, but    extension can be understood without motion.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes conception of mind and body as distinct substances    includes some interesting corollaries which result from a    characteristic application of rational principles and account    for some characteristic doctrinal differences between Descartes    and empiricist philosophers. One consequence of Descartes    conception of the mind as a substance whose principal attribute    is thought is that the mind must always be thinking. Since, for    Descartes, thinking is something of which the thinker is    necessarily aware, Descartes commitment to thought as an    essential, and therefore, inseparable, property of the mind    raises some awkward difficulties. Arnauld, for example, raises    one such difficulty in his Objections to Descartes    Meditations: presumably there is much going on in the    mind of an infant in its mothers womb of which the infant is    not aware. In response to this objection, and also in response    to another obvious problem, that is, that of dreamless sleep,    Descartes insists on a distinction between being aware of or    conscious of our thoughts at the time we are thinking them, and    remembering them afterwards (CSMK III, 357). The infant is, in    fact, aware of its thinking in the mothers womb, but it is    aware only of very confused sensory thoughts of pain and    pleasure and heat (not, as Descartes points out, metaphysical    matters (CSMK III, 189)) which it does not remember afterwards.    Similarly, the mind is always thinking even in the most    dreamless sleep, it is just that the mind often immediately    forgets much of what it had been aware.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes commitment to embracing the implications  however    counter-intuitive  of his substance-attribute metaphysics,    puts him at odds with, for instance, Locke, who mocks the    Cartesian doctrine of the always-thinking soul in his An    Essay Concerning Human Understanding. For Locke, the    question whether the soul is always thinking or not must be    decided by experience and not, as Locke says, merely by    hypothesis (An Essay Concerning Human Understanding,    Book II, Chapter 1). The evidence of dreamless sleep makes it    obvious, for Locke, that the soul is not always    thinking. Because Locke ties personal identity to memory, if    the soul were to think while asleep without knowing it, the    sleeping man and the waking man would be two different persons.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes commitment to the always-thinking mind is a    consequence of his commitment to a more basic rational    principle. In establishing his conception of thinking    substance, Descartes reasons from the attribute of thinking to    the substance of thinking on the grounds that nothing has no    properties. In this case, he reasons in the other    direction, from the substance of thinking, that is, the mind,    to the property of thinking on the converse grounds that    something must have properties, and the properties it    must have are the properties that make it what it is; in the    case of the mind, that property is thought. (Leibniz found a    way to maintain the integrity of the rational principle without    contradicting experience: admit that thinking need not be    conscious. This way the mind can still think in a dreamless    sleep, and so avoid being without any properties, without any    problem about the recollection of awareness.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Another consequence of Descartes substance metaphysics    concerns corporeal substance. For Descartes, we do not know    corporeal substance directly, but rather through a grasp of its    principal attribute, extension. Extension qua property requires    a substance in which to inhere because of the rational    principle, nothing has no properties. This rational    principle leads to another characteristic Cartesian position    regarding the material world: the denial of a vacuum. Descartes    denies that space can be empty or void. Space has the property    of being extended in length, breadth, and depth, and such    properties require a substance in which to inhere. Thus,    nothing, that is, a void or vacuum, is not able to have such    properties because of the rational principle, nothing has no    properties. This means that all space is filled with    substance, even if it is imperceptible. Once again, Descartes    answers a debated philosophical question on the basis of a    rational principle.  <\/p>\n<p>    If Descartes is known for his dualism, Spinoza, of course, is    known for monism  the doctrine that there is only one    substance. Spinozas argument for substance monism (laid out in    the first fifteen propositions of the Ethics) has no    essential basis in sensory experience; it proceeds through    rational argumentation and the deployment of rational    principles; although Spinoza provides one a posteriori    argument for Gods existence, he makes clear that he presents    it only because it is easier to grasp than the a priori    arguments, and not because it is in any way necessary.  <\/p>\n<p>    The crucial step in the argument for substance monism comes in    Ethics 1p5: In Nature there cannot be two or more    substances of the same nature or attribute. It is at this    proposition that Descartes (and Leibniz, and many others) would    part ways with Spinoza. The most striking and controversial    implication of this proposition, at least from a Cartesian    perspective, is that human minds cannot qualify as substances,    since human minds all share the same nature or attribute, that    is, thought. In Spinozas philosophy, human minds are actually    themselves properties  Spinoza calls them modes  of a more    basic, infinite substance.  <\/p>\n<p>    The argument for 1p5 works as follows. If there were two or    more distinct substances, there would have to be some way to    distinguish between them. There are two possible distinctions    to be made: either by a difference in their affections or by a    difference in their attributes. For Spinoza, a substance is    something which exists in itself and can be conceived through    itself; an attribute is what the intellect perceives of a    substance, as constituting its essence (Ethics 1d4).    Spinozas conception of attributes is a matter of longstanding    scholarly debate, but for present purposes, we can think of it    along Cartesian lines. For Descartes, substance is always    grasped through a principal property, which is the nature or    essence of the substance. Spinoza agrees that an attribute is    that through which the mind conceives the nature or essence of    substance. With this in mind, if a distinction between two    substances were to be made on the basis of a difference in    attributes, then there would not be two substances of the same    attribute as the proposition indicates. This means that if    there were two substances of the same attribute, it would be    necessary to distinguish between them on the basis of a    difference in modes or affections.  <\/p>\n<p>    Spinoza conceives of an affection or mode as something which    exists in another and needs to be conceived through another.    Given this conception of affections, it is impossible, for    Spinoza, to distinguish between two substances on the basis of    a difference in affections. Doing so would be somewhat akin to    affirming that there are two apples on the basis of a    difference between two colors, when one apple can quite    possibly have a red part and a green part. As color differences    do not per se determine differences between apples, in a    similar way, modal differences cannot determine a difference    between substances  you could just be dealing with one    substance bearing multiple different affections. It is notable    that in 1p5, Spinoza uses virtually the same    substance-attribute schema as Descartes to deny a fundamental    feature of Descartes system.  <\/p>\n<p>    Having established 1p5, the next major step in Spinozas    argument for substance monism is to establish the necessary    existence and infinity of substance. For Spinoza, if things    have nothing in common with each other, one cannot be the cause    of the other. This thesis depends upon assumptions that lie at    the heart of Spinozas rationalism. Something that has nothing    in common with another thing cannot be the cause of the other    thing because things that have nothing in common with one    another cannot be understood through one another    (Ethics 1a5). But, for Spinoza, effects should be able    to be understood through causes. Indeed, what it is to    understand something, for Spinoza, is to understand its cause.    The order of knowledge, provided that the knowledge is genuine,    or, as Spinoza says, adequate, must map onto the order of    being, and vice versa. Thus, Spinozas claim that if things    have nothing in common with one another, one cannot be the    cause of the other, is an expression of Spinozas fundamental,    rationalist commitment to the intelligibility of the world.    Given this assumption, and given the fact that no two    substances have anything in common with one another, since no    two substances share the same nature or attribute, it follows    that if a substance is to exist, it must exist as causa    sui (self-caused); in other words, it must pertain to the    essence of substance to exist. Moreover, Spinoza thinks that    since there is nothing that has anything in common with a given    substance, there is therefore nothing to limit the nature of a    given substance, and so every substance will necessarily be    infinite. This assertion depends on another deep-seated    assumption of Spinozas philosophy: nothing limits itself, but    everything by virtue of its very nature affirms its own nature    and existence as much as possible.  <\/p>\n<p>    At this stage, Spinoza has argued that substances of a single    attribute exist necessarily and are necessarily infinite. The    last major stage of the argument for substance monism is the    transition from multiple substances of a single attribute to    only one substance of infinite attributes. Scholars have    expressed varying degrees of satisfaction with the lucidity of    this transition. It seems to work as follows. It is possible to    attribute many attributes to one substance. The more reality or    being each thing has, the more attributes belong to it.    Therefore, an absolutely infinite being is a being that    consists of infinite attributes. Spinoza calls an absolutely    infinite being or substance consisting of infinite attributes    God. Spinoza gives four distinct arguments for Gods    existence in Ethics 1p11. The first is commonly    interpreted as Spinozas version of an ontological argument. It    refers back to 1p7 where Spinoza proved that it pertains to the    essence of substance to exist. The second argument is relevant    to present purposes, since it turns on Spinozas version of    the principle of sufficient reason: For each thing    there must be assigned a cause, or reason, both for its    existence and for its nonexistence (Ethics 1p11dem).    But there can be no reason for Gods nonexistence for the same    reasons that all substances are necessarily infinite: there is    nothing outside of God that is able to limit Him, and nothing    limits itself. Once again, Spinozas argument rests upon his    assumption that things by nature affirm their own existence.    The third argument is a posteriori, and the fourth    pivots like the second on the assumption that things by nature    affirm their own existence.  <\/p>\n<p>    Having proven that a being consisting of infinite attributes    exists, Spinozas argument for substance monism is nearly    complete. It remains only to point out that no substance    besides God can exist, because if it did, it would have to    share at least one of Gods infinite attributes, which, by 1p5,    is impossible. Everything that exists, then, is either an    attribute or an affection of God.  <\/p>\n<p>    Leibnizs universe consists of an infinity of monads or simple    substances, and God. For Leibniz, the universe must be composed    of monads or simple substances. His justification for this    claim is relatively straightforward. There must be simples,    because there are compounds, and compounds are just collections    of simples. To be simple, for Leibniz, means to be without    parts, and thus to be indivisible. For Leibniz, the simples or    monads are the true atoms of nature (L, 643). However,    material atoms are contrary to reason (L, 456).    Manifold a priori considerations lead Leibniz to reject    material atoms. In the first place, the notion of a material    atom is contradictory in Leibnizs view. Matter is extended,    and that which is extended is divisible into parts. The very    notion of an atom, however, is the notion of something    indivisible, lacking parts.  <\/p>\n<p>    From a different perspective, Leibnizs dynamical    investigations provide another argument against material atoms.    Absolute rigidity is included in the notion of a material atom,    since any elasticity in the atom could only be accounted for on    the basis of parts within the atom shifting their position with    respect to each other, which is contrary to the notion of a    partless atom. According to Leibnizs analysis of impact,    however, absolute rigidity is shown not to make sense. Consider    the rebound of one atom as a result of its collision with    another. If the atoms were absolutely rigid, the change in    motion resulting from the collision would have to happen    instantaneously, or, as Leibniz says, through a leap or in a    moment (L, 446). The atom would change from initial motion to    rest to rebounded motion without passing through any    intermediary degrees of motion. Since the body must pass    through all the intermediary degrees of motion in    transitioning from one state of motion to another, it must not    be absolutely rigid, but rather elastic; the analysis of the    parts of the body must, in correlation with the degree of    motion, proceed to infinity. Leibnizs dynamical argument    against material atoms turns on what he calls the law of    continuity, an a priori principle according to which    no change occurs through a leap.  <\/p>\n<p>    The true unities, or true atoms of nature, therefore, cannot be    material; they must be spiritual or metaphysical substances    akin to souls. Since Leibnizs spiritual substances, or monads,    are absolutely simple, without parts, they admit neither of    dissolution nor composition. Moreover, there can be no    interaction between monads, monads cannot receive impressions    or undergo alterations by means of being affected from the    outside, since, in Leibnizs famous phrase from the    Monadology, monads have no windows (L, 643). Monads    must, however, have qualities, otherwise there would be no way    to explain the changes we see in things and the diversity of    nature. Indeed, following from Leibnizs principle of the    identity of indiscernibles, no two monads can be exactly    alike, since each monad stands in a unique relation to the    rest, and, for Leibniz, each monads relation to the rest is a    distinctive feature of its nature. The way in which, for    Leibniz, monads can have qualities while remaining simple, or    in other words, the only way there can be multitude in    simplicity is if monads are characterized and distinguished by    means of their perceptions. Leibnizs universe, in summary,    consists in monads, simple spiritual substances, characterized    and distinguished from one another by a unique series of    perceptions determined by each monads unique relationship    vis--vis the others.  <\/p>\n<p>    Of the great rationalists, Leibniz is the most explicit about    the principles of reasoning that govern his thought. Leibniz    singles out two, in particular, as the most fundamental    rational principles of his philosophy: the principle of    contradiction and the principle of sufficient    reason. According to the principle of contradiction,    whatever involves a contradiction is false. According to the    principle of sufficient reason, there is no fact or true    proposition without there being a sufficient reason for its    being so and not otherwise (L, 646). Corresponding to these    two principles of reasoning are two kinds of truths: truths of    reasoning and truths of fact. For Leibniz, truths of reasoning    are necessary, and their opposite is impossible. Truths of    fact, by contrast, are contingent, and their opposite is    possible. Truths of reasoning are by most commentators    associated with the principle of contradiction because they can    be reduced via analysis to a relation between two primitive    ideas, whose identity is intuitively evident. Thus, it is    possible to grasp why it is impossible for truths of reasoning    to be otherwise. However, this kind of resolution is only    possible in the case of abstract propositions, such as the    propositions of mathematics (see Section 3, c, above).    Contingent truths, or truths of fact, by contrast, such as    Caesar crossed the Rubicon, to use the example Leibniz gives    in the Discourse on Metaphysics, are infinitely    complicated. Although, for Leibniz, every predicate is    contained in its subject, to reduce the relationship between    Caesars notion and his action of crossing the Rubicon would    require an infinite analysis impossible for finite minds.    Caesar crossed the Rubicon is a contingent proposition,    because there is another possible world in which Caesar did not    cross the Rubicon. To understand the reason for Caesars    crossing, then, entails understanding why this world    exists rather than any other possible world. It is for this    reason that contingent truths are associated with the principle    of sufficient reason. Although the opposite of truths of fact    is possible, there is nevertheless a sufficient reason why the    fact is so and not otherwise, even though this reason cannot be    known by finite minds.  <\/p>\n<p>    Truths of fact, then, need to be explained; there must be a    sufficient reason for them. However, according to Leibniz, a    sufficient reason for existence cannot be found merely in any    one individual thing or even in the whole aggregate and series    of things (L, 486). That is to say, the sufficient reason for    any given contingent fact cannot be found within the world of    which it is a part. The sufficient reason must explain why this    world exists rather than another possible world, and this    reason must lie outside the world itself. For Leibniz, the    ultimate reason for things must be contained in a necessary    substance that creates the world, that is, God. But if the    existence of God is to ground the series of contingent facts    that make up the world, there must be a sufficient reason why    God created this world rather than any of the other infinite    possible worlds contained in his understanding. As a perfect    being, God would only have chosen to bring this world into    existence rather than any other because it is the best of all    possible worlds. Gods choice, therefore, is governed by the    principle of fitness, or what Leibniz also calls the    principle of the best (L, 647). The best world,    according to Leibniz, is the one which maximizes perfection;    and the most perfect world is the one which balances the    greatest possible variety with the greatest possible order. God    achieves maximal perfection in the world through what Leibniz    calls the pre-established harmony. Although the world is made    up of an infinity of monads with no direct interaction with one    another, God harmonizes the perceptions of each monad with the    perceptions of every other monad, such that each monad    represents a unique perspective on the rest of the universe    according to its position vis--vis the others.  <\/p>\n<p>    According to Leibnizs philosophy, in the case of all true    propositions, the predicate is contained in the subject. This    is often known as the predicate-in-notion principle.    The relationship between predicate and subject can only be    reduced to an identity relation in the case of truths of    reason, whereas in the case of truths of fact, the reduction    requires an infinite analysis. Nevertheless, in both cases, it    is possible in principle (which is to say, for an    infinite intellect) to know everything that will ever happen to    an individual substance, and even everything that will happen    in the world of an individual substance on the basis of an    examination of the individual substances notion, since each    substance is an expression of the entire world. Leibnizs    predicate-in-notion principle therefore unifies both of his two    great principles of reasoning  the principle of contradiction    and the principle of sufficient reason  since the relation    between predicate and subject is either such that it is    impossible for it to be otherwise or such that there is a    sufficient reason why it is as it is and not otherwise.    Moreover, it represents a particularly robust expression of the    principle of intelligibility at the very heart of Leibnizs    system. There is a reason why everything is as it is, whether    that reason is subject to finite or only to infinite analysis.  <\/p>\n<p>    (See also: 17th Century    Theories of Substance.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Rationalism is often criticized for placing too much confidence    in the ability of reason alone to know the world. The extent to    which one finds this criticism justified depends largely on    ones view of reason. For Hume, for instance, knowledge of the    world of matters of fact is gained exclusively through    experience; reason is merely a faculty for comparing ideas    gained through experience; it is thus parasitic upon    experience, and has no claim whatsoever to grasp anything about    the world itself, let alone any special claim. For Kant, reason    is a mental faculty with an inherent tendency to transgress the    bounds of possible experience in an effort to grasp the    metaphysical foundations of the phenomenal realm. Since    knowledge of the world is limited to objects of possible    experience, for Kant, reason, with its delusions of grasping    reality beyond those limits, must be subject to critique.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sometimes rationalism is charged with neglecting or    undervaluing experience, and with embarrassingly having no    means of accounting for the tremendous success of the    experimental sciences. While the criticism of the confidence    placed in reason may be defensible given a certain conception    of reason (which may or may not itself be ultimately    defensible), the latter charge of neglecting experience is not;    more often than not it is the product of a false caricature of    rationalism  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes and Leibniz were the leading mathematicians of their    day, and stood at the forefront of science. While Spinoza    distinguished himself more as a political thinker, and as an    interpreter of scripture (albeit a notorious one) than as a    mathematician, Spinoza too performed experiments, kept abreast    of the leading science of the day, and was renowned as an    expert craftsman of lenses. Far from neglecting experience, the    great rationalists had, in general, a sophisticated    understanding of the role of experience and, indeed, of    experiment, in the acquisition and development of knowledge.    The fact that the rationalists held that experience and    experiment cannot serve as foundations for knowledge, but must    be fitted within, and interpreted in light of, a rational    epistemic framework, should not be confused with a neglect of    experience and experiment.  <\/p>\n<p>    One of the stated purposes of Descartes Meditations,    and, in particular, the hyperbolic doubts with which it    commences, is to reveal to the mind of the reader the    limitations of its reliance on the senses, which Descartes    regards as an inadequate foundation for knowledge. By leading    the mind away from the senses, which often deceive, and which    yield only confused ideas, Descartes prepares the reader to    discover the clear and distinct perceptions of the pure    intellect, which provide a proper foundation for genuine    knowledge. Nevertheless, empirical observations and    experimentation clearly had an important role to play in    Descartes natural philosophy, as evidenced by his own private    empirical and experimental research, especially in optics and    anatomy, and by his explicit statements in several writings on    the role and importance of observation and experiment.  <\/p>\n<p>    In Part 6 of the Discourse on the Method, Descartes    makes an open plea for assistance  both financial and    otherwise  in making systematic empirical observations and    conducting experiments. Also in Discourse Part 6,    Descartes lays out his program for developing knowledge of    nature. It begins with the discovery of certain seeds of    truth implanted naturally in our souls (CSM I, 144). From    them, Descartes seeks to derive the first principles and causes    of everything. Descartes Meditations illustrates these    first stages of the program. By seeds of truth Descartes has    in mind certain intuitions, including the ideas of thinking,    and extension, and, in particular, of God. On the basis of    clearly and distinctly perceiving the distinction between what    belongs properly to extension (figure, position, motion) and    what does not (colors, sounds, smells, and so forth), Descartes    discovers the principles of physics, including the laws of    motion. From these principles, it is possible to deduce many    particular ways in which the details of the world might be,    only a small fraction of which represent the way the world    actually is. It is as a result of the distance, as it were,    between physical principles and laws of nature, on one hand,    and the particular details of the world, on the other, that,    for Descartes, observations and experiments become necessary.  <\/p>\n<p>    Descartes is ambivalent about the relationship between physical    principles and particulars, and about the role that observation    and experiment play in mediating this relationship. On the one    hand, Descartes expresses commitment to the ideal of a science    deduced with certainty from intuitively grasped first    principles. Because of the great variety of mutually    incompatible consequences that can be derived from physical    principles, observation and experiment are required even in the    ideal deductive science to discriminate between actual    consequences and merely possible ones. According to the ideal    of deductive science, however, observation and experiment    should be used only to facilitate the deduction of effects from    first causes, and not as a basis for an inference to    possible explanations of natural phenomena, as Descartes makes    clear at one point his Principles of Philosophy (CSM I,    249). If the explanations were only possible, or hypothetical,    the science could not lay claim to certainty per the deductive    ideal, but merely to probability.  <\/p>\n<p>    On the other hand, Descartes states explicitly at another point    in the Principles of Philosophy that the explanations    provided of such phenomena as the motion of celestial bodies    and the nature of the earths elements should be regarded    merely as hypotheses arrived at on the basis of a    posteriori reasoning (CSM I, 255); while Descartes says    that such hypotheses must agree with observation and facilitate    predictions, they need not in fact reflect the actual causes of    phenomena. Descartes appears to concede, albeit reluctantly,    that when it comes to explaining particular phenomena,    hypothetical explanations and moral certainty (that is,    mere probability) are all that can be hoped for.  <\/p>\n<p>    Scholars have offered a range of explanations for the    inconsistency in Descartes writings on the question of the    relation between first principles and particulars. It has been    suggested that the inconsistency within the Principles of    Philosophy reflects different stages of its composition    (see Garber 1978). However the inconsistency might be    explained, it is clear that Descartes did not take it for    granted that the ideal of a deductive science of nature could    be realized. Moreover, whether or not Descartes ultimately    believed the ideal of deductive science was realizable, he was    unambiguous on the importance of observation and experiment in    bridging the distance between physical principles and    particular phenomena. (For further discussion, see Ren Descartes: Scientific    Method.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The one work that Spinoza published under his own name in his    lifetime was his geometrical reworking of Descartes    Principles of Philosophy. In Spinozas presentation of    the opening sections of Part 3 of Descartes Principles,    Spinoza puts a strong emphasis on the hypothetical    nature of the explanations of natural phenomena in Part 3.    Given the hesitance and ambivalence with which Descartes    concedes the hypothetical nature of his explanations in his    Principles, Spinozas unequivocal insistence on    hypotheses is striking. Elsewhere Spinoza endorses hypotheses    more directly. In the Treatise on the Emendation of the    Intellect, Spinoza describes forming the concept of a    sphere by affirming the rotation of a semicircle in thought. He    points out that this idea is a true idea of a sphere even if no    sphere has ever been produced this way in nature (The    Collected Works of Spinoza, Vol. 1, p. 32). Spinozas view    of hypotheses relates to his conception of good definitions    (see Section 3, b, above). If the cause through which one    conceives something allows for the deduction of all possible    effects, then the cause is an adequate one, and there is no    need to fear a false hypothesis. Spinoza appears to differ from    Descartes in thinking that the formation of hypotheses, if done    properly, is consistent with deductive certainty, and not    tantamount to mere probability or moral certainty.  <\/p>\n<p>    Again in the Treatise on the Emendation of the    Intellect, Spinoza speaks in Baconian fashion of    identifying aids that can assist in the use of the senses and    in conducting orderly experiments. Unfortunately, Spinozas    comments regarding aids are very unclear. This is perhaps    explained by the fact that they appear in a work that Spinoza    never finished. Nevertheless, it does seem clear that although    Spinoza, like Descartes, emphasized the importance of    discovering proper principles from which to deduce knowledge of    everything else, he was no less aware than Descartes of the    need to proceed via observation and experiment in descending    from such principles to particulars. At the same time, given    his analysis of the inadequacy of sensory images, the    collection of empirical data must be governed by rules and    rational guidelines the details of which it does not seem that    Spinoza ever worked out.  <\/p>\n<p>    A valuable perspective on Spinozas attitude toward    experimentation is provided by Letter 6, which Spinoza wrote to    Oldenburg with comments on Robert Boyles experimental    research. Among other matters, at issue is Boyles    redintegration (or reconstitution) of niter (potassium    nitrate). By heating niter with a burning coal, Boyle separated    the niter into a fixed part and a volatile part; he then    proceeded to distill the volatile part, and recombine it with    the fixed part, thereby redintegrating the niter. Boyles aim    was to show that the nature of niter is not determined by a    Scholastic substantial form, but rather by the composition of    parts, whose secondary qualities (color, taste, smell, and so    forth) are determined by primary qualities (size, position,    motion, and so forth). While taking no issue with Boyles    attempt to undermine the Scholastic analysis of physical    natures, Spinoza criticized Boyles interpretation of the    experiment, arguing that the fixed niter was merely an impurity    left over, and that there was no difference between the niter    and the volatile part other than a difference of state.  <\/p>\n<p>    Two things stand out from Spinozas comments on Boyle. On the    one hand, Spinoza exhibits a degree of impatience with Boyles    experiments, charging some of them with superfluity on the    grounds either that what they show is evident on the basis of    reason alone, or that previous philosophers have already    sufficiently demonstrated them experimentally. In addition,    Spinozas own interpretation of Boyles experiment is primarily    based in a rather speculative, Cartesian account of the    mechanical constitution of niter (as Boyle himself points out    in response to Spinoza). On the other hand, Spinoza appears    eager to show his own fluency with experimental practice,    describing no fewer than three different experiments of his own    invention to support his interpretation of the redintegration.    What Spinoza is critical of is not so much Boyles use of    experiment per se as his relative neglect of relevant    rational considerations. For instance, Spinoza at one point    criticizes Boyle for trying to show that secondary qualities    depend on primary qualities on experimental grounds. Spinoza    thought the proposition needed to be demonstrated on rational    grounds. While Spinoza acknowledges the importance and    necessity of observation and experiment, his emphasis and focus    is on the rational framework needed for making sense of    experimental findings, without which the results are confused    and misleading.  <\/p>\n<p>    In principle, Leibniz thinks it is not impossible to discover    the interior constitution of bodies a priori on the    basis of a knowledge of God and the principle of the best    according to which He creates the world. Leibniz sometimes    remarks that angels could explain to us the intelligible causes    through which all things come about, but he seems conflicted    over whether such understanding is actually possible for human    beings. Leibniz seems to think that while the a priori    pathway should be pursued in this life by the brightest minds    in any case, its perfection will only be possible in the    afterlife. The obstacle to an a priori conception of    things is the complexity of sensible effects. In this life,    then, knowledge of nature cannot be purely a priori, but    depends on observation and experimentation in conjunction with    reason  <\/p>\n<p>    Apart from perception, we have clear and distinct ideas only of    magnitude, figure, motion, and other such quantifiable    attributes (primary qualities). The goal of all empirical    research must be to resolve phenomena (including secondary    qualities) into such distinctly perceived, quantifiable    notions. For example, heat is explained in terms of some    particular motion of air or some other fluid. Only in this way    can the epistemic ideal be achieved of understanding how    phenomena follow from their causes in the same way that we know    how the hammer stroke after a period of time follows from the    workings of a clock (L, 173). To this end, experiments must be    carried out to indicate possible relationships between    secondary qualities and primary qualities, and to provide a    basis for the formulation of hypotheses to explain the    phenomena.  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, there is an inherent limitation to this    procedure. Leibniz explains that if there were people who had    no direct experience of heat, for instance, even if someone    were to explain to them the precise mechanical cause of heat,    they would still not be able to know the sensation of heat,    because they would still not distinctly grasp the connection    between bodily motion and perception (L, 285). Leibniz seems to    think that human beings will never be able to bridge the    explanatory gap between sensations and mechanical causes. There    will always be an irreducibly confused aspect of sensible    ideas, even if they can be associated with a high degree of    sophistication with distinctly perceivable, quantifiable    notions. However, this limitation does not mean, for Leibniz,    that there is any futility in human efforts to understand the    world scientifically. In the first place, experimental    knowledge of the composition of things is tremendously useful    in practice, even if the composition is not distinctly    perceived in all its parts. As Leibniz points out, the    architect who uses stones to erect a cathedral need not possess    a distinct knowledge of the bits of earth interposed between    the stones (L, 175). Secondly, even if our understanding of the    causes of sensible effects must remain forever hypothetical,    the hypotheses themselves can be more or less refined, and it    is proper experimentation that assists in their refinement.  <\/p>\n<p>    When citing the works of Descartes, the three volume English    translation by Cottingham, Stoothoff, Murdoch, and Kenny was    used. For the original language, the edition by Adam and    Tannery was consulted.  <\/p>\n<p>    When citing Spinozas Ethics, the translation by Curley    in A Spinoza Reader was used. The following system of    abbreviation was used when citing passages from the    Ethics: the first number designates the part of the    Ethics (1-5); then, p is for proposition, d for    definition, a for axiom, dem for demonstration, c for    corollary, and s for scholium. So, 1p17s refers to the    scholium of the seventeenth proposition of the first part of    the Ethics. For the original language, the edition by    Gebhardt was consulted.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Original post: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.iep.utm.edu\/cont-rat\/\" title=\"Rationalism, Continental | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy\">Rationalism, Continental | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Continental rationalism is a retrospective category used to group together certain philosophers working in continental Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, in particular, Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, especially as they can be regarded in contrast with representatives of British empiricism, most notably, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. Whereas the British empiricists held that all knowledge has its origin in, and is limited by, experience, the Continental rationalists thought that knowledge has its foundation in the scrutiny and orderly deployment of ideas and principles proper to the mind itself. The rationalists did not spurn experience as is sometimes mistakenly alleged; they were thoroughly immersed in the rapid developments of the new science, and in some cases led those developments.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/rationalism\/rationalism-continental-internet-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187714],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-68801","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rationalism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/68801"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=68801"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/68801\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=68801"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=68801"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=68801"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}