

Meditations on First Philosophy: with Selections from the Objections and Replies (Oxford World's Classics) [René Descartes, Michael Moriarty] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Meditations on First Philosophy: with Selections from the Objections and Replies (Oxford World's Classics) Review: Good - Good Review: Descartes is legendary indeed - A critical mind doesn't fall from the sky; it has to be acquired, built up and perfected. Rene' Descartes is and always will be the father of modern philosophy. Descartes' arguments inspired movies such as the Matrix and Inception and rightfully so. HIs legacy still lives on to this day. Descartes is indeed a powerhouse in regards to epistemology, and gave significant proof on how one can give reasons on their own existence. John Cottingham "Descartes' Meditations on First philosophy' is, indisputably, one of the greatest philosophical classics of all time." Descartes on doubting everything What we must do is find the truth by doubting all we can, and finding the only undoubtable thing then build knowledge based off that foundation. "I doubt therefore I think therefore I am, the very fact that I doubt my existence, confirms my existence is a thinking thing." This leads to truth that leads to knowledge God exists otherwise our knowledge of the external world can only be true if God exists.


| Best Sellers Rank | #109,462 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #63 in Epistemology Philosophy #187 in Modern Western Philosophy #323 in History & Philosophy of Science (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (191) |
| Dimensions | 7.71 x 0.89 x 5.15 inches |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 0192806963 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0192806963 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 336 pages |
| Publication date | July 6, 2008 |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Reading age | 13 years and up |
F**L
Good
Good
C**L
Descartes is legendary indeed
A critical mind doesn't fall from the sky; it has to be acquired, built up and perfected. Rene' Descartes is and always will be the father of modern philosophy. Descartes' arguments inspired movies such as the Matrix and Inception and rightfully so. HIs legacy still lives on to this day. Descartes is indeed a powerhouse in regards to epistemology, and gave significant proof on how one can give reasons on their own existence. John Cottingham "Descartes' Meditations on First philosophy' is, indisputably, one of the greatest philosophical classics of all time." Descartes on doubting everything What we must do is find the truth by doubting all we can, and finding the only undoubtable thing then build knowledge based off that foundation. "I doubt therefore I think therefore I am, the very fact that I doubt my existence, confirms my existence is a thinking thing." This leads to truth that leads to knowledge God exists otherwise our knowledge of the external world can only be true if God exists.
R**D
Great Deal!
This was great! Got my course material at an incredible price and brand new too! I will definitely be back for more items as my classes progress. Very Happy with my experiences in Amazon so far. Nothing to complain about. Now my wife is getting into the act and getting electronics here too. Good work Amazon. Too bad taxes had to rear its ugly head...but not a deal breaker.
A**E
Descartes at His Best
Rene Descartes' meditations still remain key tenets of modern philosophy. Easy to read. The meditations are short enough to avoid information overload.
K**Y
Five Stars
A must-read !
N**3
Five Stars
Great book & my daughter needed it quick. Fast delivery!
A**S
Not as Accessible to Undergraduates as the Discourse on Method
Although the Meditations is standard reading for Philosophy 101, I personally would recommend that instructors use the Discourse on Method. It contains the basic ideas in a more autobiographical context and does not delve into the minutiae of Cartesianism. As a system, Cartesianism is of interest only to the history of ideas as later scientific developments have proved. But it is obviously important in the history of Western Civ and so should be introduced in the college curriculum. My opinion is simply that instructors should consider the Discourse a more accessible text.
S**H
Reading this felt like wading through sludge
The book quality is fine. Pages are a little flimsy but overall it worked. I just don’t like Descartes. More holes in his meditations than swiss cheese. This is a grown man coming to the same conclusions me and my friends thought up at recess in elementary school and Descartes’ writings come off as so conceited. The critiques had more substance than the Meditations, but it was all lost with his responses.
M**.
Triangles, triangles, triangles... I might have been a bit naive when i picked up this book, but when reading the introduction my curiosity sparked over the section relating to ''Objections and Replies''. Can't say i've ever read a book, any book, where you get to read feedback via correspondence from the author. To be honest, after reading the Mediations i didn't agree with much of what Descartes was trying to put forth, particularly where he was trying to exemplify and prove the existence of God. To which much of his analogies didn't hold much strength and often confused or contorted the premise he was trying to clarify. All the same, it's not an easy thing to try to accomplish, no matter how academically skilled or religiously endowed you think you are, it's a very tough subject, and somewhat controversial matter to cover on your own, and especially try to sell it to your readers as the zenith of all evidence. Between the objectors and his own replies I kinda picture Descartes as a man who fancies himself as the majesty of all knowledge and spirituality, and those that pose proposition or conjecture be destroyed, rejected or bullied into submission. As he makes very many petty squabbles and personal stabs at his ''opponents'' in the replies, I couldn't help but look back on the Meditations as being a bit redundant the more i read through. He's certainly got a big ego, much of which is probably down to his religious conviction, but all the same i couldn't stop thinking to myself that he was one world class prick. Nevertheless, certainly made a good read. Well written, easy to follow, a very helpful and indepth introduction, as well as the ''Explanatory Notes'' at the end of the book which made the read all the more insightful. Would definitely recommend this book to others with interest in philosophy and/or metaphysics. I myself will definitely read further into Descartes as he's prompted me as a bit of a curiosity.
R**N
A heavy-duty read, the translation reflects the era of lofty prose. Be prepared to concentrate fully or nothing will sink in. This is the kind of book you read only after learning of its contents.
N**A
Good quality for reading.
D**H
The best book if you want all the meditations and arguments against Descartes Overall it is the best version of meditation on first philosophy and I recommend it to everyone interested in reading Descartes Don't buy the cheap books for 150 or 250 rupees just buy this one as it is the best and you will have an easier time understanding all the arguments
A**R
Veio bem embalado e chegou na data prevista.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 weeks ago