Is God a Deceiver?

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Rene Descartes, in Meditations on First Philosophy, dedicates his third meditation to attempting to prove the existence of God, an omnipotent, infinite and perfect being. He presents two arguments, both of which end with him concluding that God exists. However, there are gaps in his arguments and contradictions in his writings that lead one to believe otherwise. Through the course of this paper, I will discuss whether Descartes contradicts himself by arguing for a God who is not a deceiver, yet creates human beings in a way that their nature allows them to be deceived. I will present my argument in three phases: I will first explain what mind and body are and how they are distinct. Secondly, I will elucidate Descartes’ argument for God's existence, and lastly, I will attempt to illustrate how Descartes’ arguments of the existence of God are inconsistent.
According to Descartes, the mind and body are completely distinct. The Sixth Meditation encompasses two arguments in defence of Cartesian dualism: First, since the mind and the body can each be perceived clearly and distinctly apart from each other, it follows that God could cause either to exist independently of the other. This satisfies the conventional criteria for a metaphysical real distinction (Med. 6). Second, the quintessence of body as a geometrically outlined region of space involves the prospect of its infinite divisibility. The mind, however, despite the variety of its many faculties and operations, must be conceived as a single, unitary, indivisible being. Since incompatible properties cannot inhere in any one substance, the mind and body are perfectly distinct (Med. 6).
The notion of a substance to Descartes was that which could exist independently of anything else. ...

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...ted. In retrospect, there is no way to determine whether or not the idea of God is invented or adventitious; however, there is a lot of evidence to suggest that the idea of God is innate.
In the fourth meditation, Descartes contradicts himself once again by saying "nothing can cause itself to exist, so God cannot cause himself to exist” (Descartes, 4th Mediation). According to Descartes, something must be the cause for God and once again, we would go down an infinite regression. Due to this contradiction, one can refute all of the options that Descartes presents as the reasons for his existence; leaving the argument without a finishing clause which proves the existence of God. After looking at both of Descartes arguments for the existence of God and finding gaps and contradictions for each, we are left with no reason provided by Descartes for the existence of God.

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