Descartes on the Intellectual Nature of Human Sense Perception: From the Innermost Self to the Material World

Autores/as

  • Modesto Manuel Gómez-Alonso "Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca" "University of Edinburgh"

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_arif/a.rif.201511116

Resumen

In this essay, I argue that a proper understanding of the Cartesian proof of the external world sheds light on some vexatious questions concerning his theory of sense perception. Three main points emerge from the discussion: a picture of the mind, conceived as the power of understanding, as essentially related to the physical world; an extension of rationality such as it includes a set of necessities that neither can be deduced from the principles furnished by pure understanding alone nor are to be found among the particular items of sense experience; and a conception of human sense perception as a composite power that includes sensory awareness as well as understanding, and so that establishes a sharp distinction between human and animal sensory awareness. As far as agency is a constitutive ingredient of human sense perception, Descartes’ doctrine is in line with some current versions of a virtue epistemology.

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Biografía del autor/a

Modesto Manuel Gómez-Alonso, "Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca" "University of Edinburgh"

Profesor Encargado de Cátedra, Facultad de Filosofía, Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca.

Visiting Researcher, University of Edinburgh.

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Publicado

2015-07-13

Cómo citar

Gómez-Alonso, M. M. (2015). Descartes on the Intellectual Nature of Human Sense Perception: From the Innermost Self to the Material World. Análisis. Revista De investigación filosófica, 2(1), 163–193. https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_arif/a.rif.201511116