The Belief Of The Three Ideas Of God By Descartes

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Descartes believes God exists and plays a key role in his belief that he is a thinking thing residing in a material world. God’s existence is an innate idea we are born with. This idea explains how our clear and distinct reasoning leads us towards knowledge. Descartes believes God to be a perfect being, so he cannot deceive us. Since he has a perfect knowledge and supplies us with truth in this world, we must believe we reside in a material world. Descartes sets apart ideas into three distinct categories: Innate, Factitious (self-evident), or Adventitious. Adventitious ideas are unique in the way they do not originate from within a human; rather they are a culmination of many sense experiences. An example of this can be seen in the idea …show more content…

He furthers this principle by bringing up the idea of a triangle. Since he can clearly draw a mental image of a triangle in his mind, and he can perceive all the properties of that specific triangle with such clarity, then he can believe in his idea. The idea of necessity occurs because when he thinks of a three sided figure with interior angles summing to equal 180 degrees, he automatically thinks of a triangle. These two separate thoughts belong together. He uses this scenario in his analogous reasoning for explaining God’s existence. Descartes can perceive the idea of God existing with distinct clarity and can recognize his properties undoubtedly. These properties include: eternal, omnipotent, all knowing, and existing. If existence does in fact prove to be a necessary essence that we can perceive with clarity and distinctiveness, then God must exist just like a triangle must have three sides. He later uses this way of clarification to ascertain the knowledge that the properties pertaining to mathematics and geometry can be proven exactly the same way. Essentiality plus clarity and distinctiveness helps us gain …show more content…

He determines items concerning pure mathematics exist because he conceives them clearly and distinctly. Descartes believes there is no doubt that God has the power to produce all images we can perceive. For items besides corporeal nature, including: colors, sounds, tastes, and pain he claims to perceive these items best by sensory experience. We have a passive faculty of sensation; we see this in our daily life as we recognize blue in the sky, warmth from the sun, and smells from the food we eat. We also inherit an active faculty of sensation, and this is centered upon active functions such as: pain in the stomach due to hunger, frostbite to extremities long exposure in cold weather, and parchedness from thirst. He concludes this active power is not within him because he is a thinking thing, and he does not contain the capability to act or experience sensory things on his own, it is contrary to his will. Since he concludes the active power is not within himself, so the active power of sense must originate from somewhere else: God or the Material World. Descartes claims he has been naturally fitted with a strong inclination that is clear and distinct to believe in the material world. He then wonders if this great inclination is deceptive—then God is a deceiver. We know this to be untrue from the argument of the deceiver in Meditation III, we addressed previously. We know and have proved God is not

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