Descartes Among The Scholastics
Descartes Among The Scholastics
Descartes Among The Scholastics
History of Science
and Medicine Library
VOLUME 20
VOLUME 1
Descartes among
the Scholastics
By
Roger Ariew
LEIDEN BOSTON
2011
Cover illustration: from Dispute of Queen Cristina Vasa and Ren Descartes (1884), by Nils
Forsberg (18421934), adapted by David A. Ariew.
Ariew, Roger.
Descartes among the Scholastics / by Roger Ariew.
p. cm. (History of science and medicine library ; v. 20) (Scientific and learned cultures
and their institutions ; v. 1)
Rev. ed. of: Descartes and the last Scholastics. 1999.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 978-90-04-20724-0 (hardcover : alk. paper)
1. Descartes, Ren, 1596-1650. 2. ScholasticismHistory17th century. I. Ariew, Roger.
Descartes and the last Scholastics. II. Title. III. Series.
B1875.A65 2011
194dc22
2011011642
ISSN 1872-0684
ISBN 978 90 04 20724 0
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix
List of Illustrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi
List of Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
. The Cartesian Destiny of Form and Matter and Its Critics . . . . . . . . 127
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was assisted by grants and fellowships from the National
Endowment for the Humanities, an independent federal agency and the
National Science Foundation (grant no. DIR-). None of it would
have been possible without the funds these institutions made available
nor would I have been able to afford the research time at the Bibliothque
Nationale in Paris. I am also grateful to the Bibliothque Nationale for
allowing me to use its wonderful facilities and for providing me with
microfiches of countless volumes. I must say, their website Gallica is an
amazing, absolutely invaluable resource.
These essays were written at various times and for various audiences.
Portions of the volume were read (at different stages of their composition)
at many universities, workshops, and conferences. I am indebted to all
these audiences for their questions and comments.
I am also grateful to various publishers for allowing me to use some
of my previously printed materials. Parts of chapter were published as
Descartes and Scholasticism: the Intellectual Background to Descartes
Thought, in Cambridge Companion to Descartes, ed. John Cottingham
(Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, ), pp. . Much of chapter
was published as Ideas, in and before Descartes, Journal of the History
of Ideas (): , and some of chapter as The Cartesian Des-
tiny of Form and Matter, Early Science and Medicine (): ,
both co-authored with Marjorie Grene. Portions of chapter appeared
as Theory of Comets at Paris during the Seventeenth Century, Journal
of the History of Ideas (): . An earlier version of chap-
ter was issued as Damned if you do: Cartesians and Censorship,
, Perspectives on Science (): . Portions of chapters , ,
, and were initially published in Frenchchapter as Descartes,
Basson et la scolastique renaissante, in Descartes et la Renaissance, ed.
Emmanuel Faye and chapter as Les premires tentatives vers une sco-
lastique cartsienne: la correspondance de Descartes et les Jsuites de
La Flche sur l Eucharistie, in Momenti della biografia intellettuale di
Descartes nella Correspondance, ed. Jean-Robert Armogathe and Giu-
lia Belgioioso. A portion of chapter was published as Les Principia
en France et les condamnations du cartsianisme, in Descartes: Prin-
cipia Philosophiae (), ed. Jean-Robert Armogathe and Giulia
x acknowledgments
Roger Ariew
Tampa, Florida
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
It has been twelve years since the publication of Descartes and the Last
Scholastics, but I did not stop working on the themes discussed in that
book during that time. My intent here is to revise that monograph, that
is, to restate its theses more sharply and add considerable detail to its
contents. I hope to improve each and every one of its ten chapters. In
the initial work, my goal was to have each chapter reflect the prelimi-
nary essay, now the first chapter, which was then called Descartes among
the Scholastics. As I said then, the pattern of the preliminary essay is
repeated throughout the volume: one moves from within Cartesian phi-
losophy to its intellectual context in the seventeenth century, then to
living philosophical debate being waged by Descartes and his contem-
poraries, and finally to the first reception of Cartesian philosophy, as
another means (though an indirect one) with which that philosophy
might be understood as it was intended. I believe I can better fulfill that
promise a dozen years later.
I said then, and still believe to be true, that a philosophical system can-
not be studied adequately apart from the intellectual context in which it
is situated. Philosophers do not usually utter propositions in a vacuum,
but accept, modify, or reject doctrines whose meaning and significance
are given in a particular culture. Thus, Cartesian philosophy should be
regarded, as indeed it was in Descartes own day, as a reaction against,
as well as an indebtedness to, the scholastic philosophy that still domi-
nated the intellectual climate in early seventeenth century Europe. But
it is not sufficient, when discussing Descartes relations with scholastics,
simply to enumerate and compare the various Cartesian and scholastic
doctrines. To understand what set Descartes apart both from the scholas-
tics and also from other innovators, one does have to grasp the reasons
behind the various opinions but, beyond that, one has to understand the
intellectual milieu in which these reasons played a role, to see what tacti-
cal measures could have been used to advance ones views or to persuade
others of them. This is the common theme linking the chapters that fol-
low.
introduction
evidently a way of doing things that is repugnant to the spirit and letter
of Descartes doctrine. Thus, it is important to show that, in construct-
ing the Meditations, Descartes was responding to objections he received
to the Discourse, that he made numerous changes to his text in the pro-
cess of publishing it with Objections and Replies, and that he wanted his
readers to understand that he made such changes.
The second new section deals with Descartes and Surez on the the-
ory of distinctions. Numerous scholars have pointed out the similarities
between Descartes theory of distinctions, from Principles I, articles
, and that of Francisco Surez, from Metaphysical Disputations, dispu-
tation . Descartes theory of distinctions seems clearly important to his
philosophy. The subtitle of the Meditations and the title of Meditation VI
indicate that the aim of that work, like that of the beginning of the Princi-
ples, is the demonstration of the real distinction between mind and body,
that is, a demonstration of a real, not modal distinction or distinction
of reason. The thesis that the mind is a mode of the body is certainly
not Descartes, though it is that of his erstwhile disciple Regius, one that
Descartes explicitly rejects. I conclude, however, that Descartes theory
of distinctions is one of those deceptive scholastic bits constructed after
: there is no mention in Descartes of formal or modal distinction
before Caterus challenge in the First Set of Objections; there is no formal
theory of distinction, Surezian or otherwise, that Descartes was operat-
ing with before , in the manuscript of the Meditations.
The third new section concerns the order of the sciences and Descartes
tree of Philosophy. We tend to think of Descartes tree of philosophy, from
the preface to the Principles, as a peculiarly Cartesian, anti-scholastic
image. That metaphor famously states: All of philosophy is like a tree,
whose roots are Metaphysics, whose trunk is physics, and the branches
coming out of this trunk are all the other sciences. I argue, instead, that
the image is intended as a depiction of a scholastic-type subalternation
of the sciences. The tree of philosophy can even be found used in that
fashion in the late scholastic textbooks with which Descartes looked at
in the s. In the opening section of his Summa, part III (Physica),
entitled Arbor Physicae (Tree of Physics), Charles Franois Abra de
Raconis compares the whole of physics to a tree whose roots are the
first principles and causes of natural body, whose bark is the accidents
of natural body, whose trunk is the world, and whose branches are the
heavens, the elements, and mixed bodies; De Raconis whole book is
arranged according to this image. Given this context, it would be difficult
to argue for an opposition between Descartes and Aristotelians on the
introduction
The next essay, which I originally wrote with Marjorie Grene, discusses
Descartes concept of idea and the scholastic context from which it arose.
It focuses on the use of the term in the writings of four seventeenth-
century philosophers: Eustachius, Jean Crassot, de Raconis, and Rudolph
Goclenius. It also discusses the traditional usage of the term in the
philosophical corpus of seventeenth-century scholasticism (in the Corps
de Philosophie of Thophraste Bouju, for example). The chapter concludes
that Descartes drew on the current seventeenth century literary and
philosophical usage of the term, as in the works of Eustachius, Goclenius,
and de Raconis, that by calling on the ideas in Gods mind as his source,
Descartes set ideas free from their connection to sensation, and that there
is precedent in the philosophical literature for Descartes insistence on
the truth of ideas.
Originally, this chapter concentrated on context and said little about
the debate that followed in the second half of the seventeenth century.
I have added a section on Pierre-Daniel Huets and Jean Duhamels cri-
tiques of Descartes on ideas, with Pierre Sylvain Rgis response, coming
to the defense of Descartes. (There is obviously a major discussion among
the CartesiansArnauld, Malebranche, et al.about ideas, but I restrict
myself to the scholastic critique and the Cartesian response to it.)
anything is. However, these breaks are not as severe as might have been
thought, if seventeenth century scholasticism is taken into account. For
many reasons, the late Aristotelians broke with Aristotle and accepted
the reality of matter without form and form without matter, and form as
the principle of individuation. In addition, the intellectual landscape of
seventeenth-century philosophy was not limited to the properly scholas-
tic; there were anti-Aristotelian options (some corpuscularian, others
not) available before Descartes. Given that the gulf between the school-
men and novatores like Descartes was not so great, the way was open
for certain compromises: a variety of scholastic restatements of Carte-
sianism from more or less Cartesian positions. Thus, it can be said that
some varieties of Aristotelianism in the seventeenth century prepared the
ground for the acceptance of Cartesianism and the eventual attempts at
their reunification.
In the revised version I reinforce the thesis of this chapter in a number
of ways. First, I add to the anti-Aristotelian options available before
Descartes: from the neo-Epicurean Nicholas Hill, to Francis Bacon, Gali-
leo, and others. Second, and more importantly, I add a section on the
criticism of scholastics, such as Goudin, to Descartes position. I also
discuss the objections by the atomist Cartesian, Grauld de Cordemoy,
to the original Cartesian position (and refer as well to G.W. Leibnizs
criticism of Cordemoy).
Basso on the subject of rarefaction and the ether in order to make sense
of these references; this also requires a discussion of their views on
corpuscles and the void. But, above all, these doctrines are contrasted
with those of the Aristotle of the scholastics at the start of the seventeenth
century, Aristotelians such as Eustachius a Sancto Paulo and Scipion
Dupleix, but especially Toletus and the Coimbrans, authors constantly
cited by Basso, and whom Descartes remembers reading in his youth.
In the revised version of the chapter, I sharpen the discussion of
scholastic minima naturalia theory, which forms the background for the
views of Toletus, adding Daniel Sennerts arguments for such minina.
The chapter considers a key seventeenth century question about the sub-
stance of the heavens: whether astronomical novelties, such as sunspots
and comets, necessitate a significant change in cosmological theory.
Based on what was taught during the first half of the seventeenth cen-
tury, the essay details the resiliency of traditional Aristotelian cosmol-
ogy against the new astronomy of Galileo and Descartes. The authors
surveyed include both Catholic and Protestant textbook writers at Paris
and at Jesuit and non-Jesuit colleges around Paris (Thophraste Bouju,
Jacques du Chevreul, Pierre du Moulin, Ren de Ceriziers, Antoine
Goudin, Jean Duhamel, Jacques Grandamy, et al.).
I add to the chapter a discussion of the three cosmological trea-
tises by Libertus Fromondus, a correspondent of Descartes: Saturnali-
tiae Coenae, Variatae Somnio, sive Peregrinatione Caelestis; De Cometa
anni . Dissertationes; and De Cometis, Book III of his Meteorologico-
rum libri. Fromondus brings a new element to the argument, especially
since he has a good criticism of Galileos view of comets. I also expand
the exposition of the cosmological views of Bouju and du Chevreul.
The examples of Bouju, du Chevreul, Fromondus, and Grandamy show
that thinkers at the time accepted Galileos novel observations but did
not accept the Copernican or Tychonic system. They made significant
modifications to their Aristotelianism to accommodate astronomical
novelties: they used Aristotelian principles they deemed more funda-
mental to deny Aristotelian tenets they regarded as secondary. While
du Chevreul and the others could be thought as normal scientistsin
this case, Aristoteliansthey made changes that went well beyond what
introduction
The chapter analyzes the exchanges between Descartes and the Jesuits of
La Flche on the mystery of the Eucharist. These exchanges are regarded
as Descartes first steps toward a Cartesian scholasticism. Contrary to
the secondary literature on the subject, Descartes did not write about
transubstantiation against his willbecause he was forced to respond
to Antoine Arnaulds questions about the Eucharist in the Fourth Set
of Objections ()or merely to flatter the Jesuits. Descartes himself
freely raised these issues as early as and considered his explanation
of the mystery of the Eucharist to be an excellent result of his philosophy
(well before his exchange with Arnauld). For Descartes (as for others)
there are two different aspects of the mystery that required explanation:
(i) how, without using the scholastic doctrine of real accidents, the bread
after transubstantiation might still look like bread to us (discussed in
Replies IV), and (ii) how Christ may be really present in the consecrated
bread (discussed in the Letters to Mesland). The essay also demonstrates
(what has not been previously noticed) that the Cartesian answer to the
question of real presence is the standard seventeenth century scholastic
(Scotist, not Thomist) view.
A new section beginning with the reception, by Robert Desgabets, of
Descartes view concerning aspect (ii) indicates the controversial nature
of the Cartesian account. Aspect (ii) occurs only in some letters with
Denis Mesland. By , Claude Clerselier published Descartes corre-
spondence in three volumes, but Clerselier consciously left the Mesland
letters out of his collection. They were not published until the nineteenth
century. On the other hand, when G.W. Leibniz wrote a treatise on tran-
substantiation (in ) as an attempt to reconcile Catholics and Protes-
tants on various theological issues, the view he developed, independently,
had strong affinities with those of Descartes. A discussion of Leibnizs
treatise and his principle of individuation from provides another
perspective of Descartes views on transubstantiation, that is, about his
principle of individuation.
introduction
Condemnations of Cartesianism:
The Extension and Unity of the Universe
For most readers of Descartes, the topic of Descartes relations with the
scholastics brings to mind his disparaging comments about the philos-
ophy he was taught: in my college days I discovered that nothing can
be imagined which is too strange or incredible to have been said by some
philosopher.1 Descartes, in the Discourse on Method, seemed to find little
worthwhile in his education, including his schooling in scholastic philos-
ophy and the sciences; at best, philosophy gives us the means of speak-
ing plausibly about any subject and of winning the admiration of the less
learned, and jurisprudence, medicine, and other sciences bring honors
and riches to those who cultivate them;2 but there is still no point in
[philosophy] which is not disputed and hence doubtful and, as for the
other sciences, insofar as they borrow their principles from philosophy
. . . nothing solid could have been built upon such shaky foundations.3
Obviously, the Descartes of the Discourse represented himself as dis-
satisfied with school learning in general. When reading his correspon-
dence, however, one can catch a glimpse of a different Descartes. In ,
approximately a year after the publication of the Discourse, Descartes
wrote a letter responding to a request for his opinion about adequate
schooling for the correspondents son. In the letter, Descartes attempted
to dissuade the correspondent from sending his son to school in Hol-
land. According to Descartes, there is no place on earth where philos-
ophy is better taught than at La Flche, the Jesuit institution in which
he studied. Descartes gave four reasons for preferring La Flche. First,
he asserted, philosophy is taught very poorly here [in Holland]; profes-
sors teach only one hour a day, for approximately half the year, without
having been taught the Ciceronian phrase and having come to realize the matter himself.
The pronouncements of the Discourse are formulae that echo standard skeptical asser-
tions; for the literary background to the Discourse, see Gilson, Discours de la mthode
texte et commentaire.
2 AT VI, : CSM I, .
3 AT VI, : CSM I, .
chapter one
4AT II, .
5For more information concerning La Flche and its curriculum, consult Rochemon-
teix ; a popular exposition of the same material can be found in Sirven .
6 For other colleges, as well as for general Jesuit educational theory, see: Wallace ;
years of a students education, from about the age of fifteen on). It would
have consisted of lectures, twice a day in sessions lasting two hours each,
from a set curriculum based primarily on Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas.
During Descartes time, the first year was devoted to logic and ethics,
consisting of commentaries and questions based on Porphyrys Isagoge
and Aristotles Categories, On Interpretation, Prior Analytics, Topics, Pos-
terior Analytics, and Nicomachean Ethics. The second year was devoted
to physics and metaphysics, based primarily on Aristotles Physics, De
Caelo, On Generation and Corruption Book I, and Metaphysics Books ,
, and .7 The third year of philosophy was a year of mathematics, con-
sisting of arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy, including such
topics as fractions, proportions, elementary figures, techniques for the
measurement of distances and heights, trigonometry, gnomics, geogra-
phy and hydrography, chronology, and optics.8 Students would have been
expected to study their professors lectures thoroughly. Their daily rou-
tine would have included a number of hours of required study time. They
would have had to show their work to a prefect daily and to repeat materi-
als from their lectures to a repetitor; their learning would have been tested
in weekly and monthly oral disputations in front of their professors and
peers.
Descartes was not exaggerating when he asserted that the student
population of La Flche was diverse, geographically and otherwise. La
Flche accepted boys from all corners of France and from all walks
of life. During Descartes days, its boarders numbered approximately
one hundred, and it taught, in addition, about twelve hundred external,
or day, students. Moreover, the equality of treatment practiced by the
Jesuits, and referred to by Descartes, does appear to be an innovation
in the context of seventeenth-century France; it is verifiable by available
documents. The sons of the most humble families lived in the same rooms
as those of the most exalted. When arriving at La Flche, one checked
ones sword in the armory. Without a sword, a gentleman forgot his
7 Later, the second year became the year of physics and mathematics, with the third
year being devoted to metaphysics. The three-year Jesuit collegiate curriculum was a year
longer than the typical ones, such as those found in the colleges of the University of Paris,
which usually consisted of a year of ethics and logic and a second year of physics and
metaphysics.
8 See, for example, Gaultruche , a good exemplar for what would have been
taught in mathematics at La Flche, given that Gaultruche was a Jesuit who taught
mathematics at La Flche and Caens.
chapter one
with his attitude on scholastic education in the Discourse. Of course, Descartes is merely
stressing the academic rigor of the teaching, the discipline, and the social ethos of La
Flche; on the face of it this is quite compatible with the Discourse thesis that the subjects
taught there were not much use. But why should one recommend a more rigorous
school over a less rigorous one when what is taught more rigorously is of little use?
This question becomes more pressing when one realizes that, as early as , Regius
(Chair of Medicine, and from September on, extraordinary Professor at Utrecht)
was already giving private lessons, loosely based on Cartesian philosophy and physics,
having been taught the matter by Reneri, Descartes friend and earliest supporter in the
Netherlands. It is one thing to recommend La Flche as the best of a sorry lot, but another
to recommend it over Utrecht, where one might be taught some Cartesian philosophy.
12 AT I, .
descartes and the last scholastics
which Descartes indicates that, of the three copies of the Discourse enclosed, one is for the
recipient of the letter, another for the Cardinal de Richelieu, and the third for the King
himself.
14 AT I, . This sentence enables one to guess that the recipient of the letter is the Pre
Etienne Nol, Descartes repetitor in philosophy, especially since Nol was rector of La
Flche in . See Rodis-Lewis , p. n; see also Rodis-Lewis, Descartes aurait-
il eu un professeur nominaliste? and Quelques Questions disputes sur la jeunesse de
Descartes, in , pp. .
15 AT VI, ; CSM I, .
16 AT I, .
chapter one
17 AT I, .
18 AT I, : CSMK ; emphasis supplied.
19 See Douarche ; see also Brockliss .
descartes and the last scholastics
papers, all of which ultimately led to their ratio studiorum. As part of the
self-consciousness about teaching, textbooks, both Jesuit and non-Jesuit,
had undergone significant changes. Having decided to standardize their
curricula, the Jesuits set out to write texts that reflected their curricu-
lar decisions. Early Jesuit textbooks presented Aristotles texts in a most
scholarly fashion; they were modeled after the great commentaries on
Aristotles works, each volume treating a specific Aristotelian text (the
Physics, de Anima, de Caelo, etc.), but presenting both the Greek text and
Latin translations, together with Latin paraphrases (explanationes), lead-
ing to quaestiones, the treatment of standard problems relevant to partic-
ular texts, further subdivided into articles. Later Jesuit textbooks did the
same, but deleted the Greek version of Aristotles text. The textbooks of
University of Paris professors deleted even Aristotles Latin text: they sim-
ply strung together quaestiones in the order in which the text would have
been presented, but did so for all Aristotelian sciences within the frame-
work of the whole course of philosophyEthics and Logic, Physics and
Metaphysicsin a single volume. The same held for popular contempo-
rary presentations of the same materials in the French language.
But the contents of the textbooks were also a focus of discussion. There
was a renaissance in Thomistic philosophy during the second half of
the sixteenth century. For the duration of the Council of Trent (
), Thomas Summa Theologiae was placed next to the Bible, on the
same table, to help the council in its deliberations, so that it might derive
appropriate answers. In Pope Pius V proclaimed Saint Thomas
Aquinas Doctor of the Church and commissioned a master edition of
his works (accomplished in Rome, ). Saint Ignatius of Loyola,
founder of the Jesuits, advised the Jesuits to follow the doctrines of
Saint Thomas in theology and those of Aristotle in philosophy: In
theology there should be lectures on the Old and New Testaments and
on the scholastic doctrine of Saint Thomas. . . . In logic, natural and
moral philosophy, and metaphysics, the doctrine of Aristotle should be
followed, as also in the other liberal arts.20 Naturally, it would have
been difficult to follow Saint Thomas in theology without also accepting
much of his philosophy; and to follow Saint Thomas in philosophy
would have required one to follow Aristotle as well. Thus, Loyolas advice
often resulted in the Jesuits offering a Thomist reading of Aristotelian
doctrines. Ultimately, the advice was made formal in the Jesuits ratio
21 Rochemonteix , p. n.
22 The four kinds of causes, as given in Aristotles Physics II, chs. , are formal,
material, efficient, and final; all four would be involved in a complete explanation of a
change. For example, in the Aristotelian account of the reproduction of man, the material
cause is the matter supplied by the mother, the formal cause is the specific form of man
(that is, rational animal), the efficient cause is supplied by the father, and the final cause
is the end toward which the process is directed.
23 Aristotle discusses the four elements in De Caelo III and IV. The elements, that is,
earth, water, air, and fire, are characterized by pairs of the contraries, hot and cold, moist
and dry (On Generation and Corruption I); in Aristotles theory of motion, the elements
move naturally in a rectilinear motion, the first two elements having a natural downward
motion, toward the center of the universe, whereas the second two have a natural upward
motion, toward the periphery of the sublunar region. This creates a distinction between
the sublunar world of the elements and the supralunar world of the heavens, whose ether
moves naturally in a circular motion.
24 The three principles of natural things are form, matter, and privation, discussed by
Aristotle in Book I of the Physics. The form of a thing is its actuality, whereas the matter
is its potentiality; privation is what the thing is not. For example, in a change from water
being cold to being hot, heat is the form that the thing lacks, but it is water, the matter
or subject, that gains the form and becomes hot (cold itself or the bare matter does not
change). Change is the gaining or losing of forms; but some forms are essential and cannot
be lost (for example, man cannot lose the form, rational animal, and remain man). Thus,
a form is accidental when it confers a new quality to a substance already formedheat,
for example. On the other hand, a substantial form confers being; there is generation of
a new being when a substantial form unites with matter, and real destruction when one
separates from matter.
25 These axioms are sufficient to banish Stoic, Epicurean, and atomist philosophies.
Epicureans and atomists account for change by the substitution or rearrangement of basic
particles, or atoms, not by the replacement of forms in a matter capable of accepting
various forms. Moreover, for an Epicurean or an atomist, the particles themselves would
be more basic than the elements, and an insistence on four elements would go against
Stoic cosmology.
descartes and the last scholastics
Let no one defend anything against the most common opinion of the
philosophers and theologians, for example, that natural agents act at a
distance without a medium.26
Let no one defend any opinion contrary to common opinion without
consulting the Superior or Prefect.
Let no one introduce any new opinion in philosophy or theology without
consulting the Superior or Prefect.
intellective soul, that is, the doctrine denying the existence of individual souls and
asserting that there is just one intellective soul.
28 The target of this opinion seems to be the Augustinian and Franciscan doctrine
of the plurality of substantial forms. John Duns Scotus and William of Ockham held
the thesis that man is a composite of forms (rational, sensitive, etc.), a thesis previously
rejected by Thomas Aquinas, who argued that there is just one form or soul in man (the
rational soul), which performs the functions that the other souls perform in lower beings.
chapter one
Varia. The predicables are five in number. Divine essence does not have
a single subsistence common to three persons, but only three personal
subsistences. Sin is a formal evil and a privation, not something positive.
We are not causes of our own predestination.
Let all professors conform to these prescriptions; let them say nothing
against the propositions here announced, either in public or in private;
under no pretext, not even that of piety or truth, should they teach any-
thing other than that these texts are established and defined. This is not
just an admonition, but a teaching that we impose.29
Given the above, one might wonder whether Descartes attempt to gain
acceptance of his philosophy by the Jesuits was a quixotic endeavor.
Descartes did try to indicate that his doctrines were not dangerous to
the faith; but the Jesuits defined danger to the faith as any novelty in
either theology or in philosophy, especially as it concerned the axioms
and common opinions of scholasticism. And Descartes would not have
fared very well in this respect. He rejected the four causes, arguing that
final causes are not appropriate for natural philosophy.30 He set aside
the four elements and held that there was only one kind of matter, and
that all its varieties could be explained as modifications of extensions.31
Moreover, Descartes did not accept the three Aristotelian principles of
matter, form, and privation. Except for rational beings who have minds,
Descartes discarded the doctrine of substantial forms.32 Finally, though
Descartes might have agreed that fire is hot and dry, and air is humid
and hot, it would have been as phenomenological descriptions, and not
as representing any basic reality; such statements would have been incon-
sistent with Descartes mechanical philosophy, which required some kind
of corpuscularianism, as well as the rejection of final causes and substan-
tial forms (except for mans body as informed by a soul).
(as does Le Bossu, in [], pp. ) one could say that Descartes accepts
three out of Aristotles four elements, that is, fire, air, and earth. (See, for example, Le
Monde: AT XI, .) But that would be to disregard the important difference that Aristotles
elements are differentiated qualitatively, whereas there is only a quantitative difference
among Descartes elements. See also chapter .
32 See Principles IV, art. , and elsewhere; Descartes does say (in a letter to Regius,
AT III, ) that he does not reject substantial forms overtly, that he merely asserts
they are not needed; the context of the assertion is an interesting letter in which Descartes
counsels Regius to abstain from public disputes and from advancing novel opinions (that
one ought to retain the old opinions in name, giving only new reasons).
descartes and the last scholastics
On the other hand, Descartes would have agreed with the common
opinion that natural agents do not act at a distance without a medium.33
Interestingly, he could accept all the theological and philosophical opin-
ions concerning God, angels, and man that Jesuits were required to sus-
tain and defend, including the thesis that Gods power is infinite in inten-
sity,34 that he is a free agent,35 that the intellective soul in man is the sub-
stantial form of the body,36 that the intellective soul is not numerically
one in all men and that there is only one soul in man,37 and that sin is
a privation, not something positive.38 The only notable exception was
Descartes denial of animal souls, both sensitive and vegetative.39 Per-
haps Descartes might have thought that his orthodoxy with respect to
theological matters would have led to the acceptance of his philosophi-
cal novelties, once they were seen to harmonize with Catholic theological
doctrines.
Perhaps also, during Descartes time, there was a slightly more liberal
interpretation given to Loyolas advice to follow Thomas. The traditional
difficulty with the advice was that there were many divergent authorities.
Not all Jesuits agreed that it was a good thing for the Society to choose
a single authority, or that Saint Thomas was always the best author to
uphold. With the succession of Claudio Acquaviva as the fifth General
of the Jesuits (), these issues took on a new vigor. The period
was, of course, the one in which the Society reorganized its curricu-
lum.40 In the meanwhile, Acquaviva summarized the points that had to
33 Descartes is a mechanist and his world is a plenum. For the impossibility of void,
see AT IV, .
34 Meditation III, AT VII, (AT IX, ).
35 AT I, and elsewhere.
36 For the doctrine that the numerical unity of a body does not depend upon its matter
but its form, which is the soul, see the letter to Mesland, AT IV, : CSMK . See also
chapter .
37 AT III, : CSMK .
38 AT VII, : CSM II .
39 AT III, ; AT VI, .
40 The institutional setting of early modern French education was fairly complex;
the dominant players at the time were the dozen or so secular Catholic colleges of the
University of Paris, together with seculars in about a dozen major cities, and those of
the three principal teaching orders: the Jesuits, the Oratorians, and the Doctrinaires.
There were others who taught philosophy, of course, that is, a handful of Franciscans,
Dominicans, Benedictines, Josephites, and the like, plus a few Protestants. But the largest
group of colleges was clearly that of the Society of Jesus, which indeed became a very
powerful force in early modern French education.
chapter one
pp. n n.
descartes and the last scholastics
order not to diminish faith in any way would surely have made it dif-
ficult, if not impossible, for Descartes to have had his views accepted.
Descartes opinions went against many of the axioms received in philos-
ophy. It would have been too optimistic an assessment to think that he
might have gained acceptance with a majority of competent men in the
theological schools.
Acquavivas advice, like Borgias before him, blurred the lines between
theology and philosophy; the requirement to follow Thomas in theology
carried with it the advice to follow the axioms and the common sentiment
of the theological schoolswhich is to say, Thomist-inspired axioms and
sentiment. However, the reasons why Jesuits followed Thomist theology
(and Thomist interpretations of Aristotelian philosophy) and avoided
novelties in theology and in philosophy were not dogmatic, but pru-
dential. As conservative as the Jesuit practices seem, there was always
the possibility that new doctrines might come to be accepted, especially
those that did not seem to threaten the faith, those that appeared distant
from theological matters. It is almost paradoxical that an order so out-
wardly conservative about philosophy and theology, with a pedagogy that
rejects novelty, would have been able to produce novel works in meteo-
rology, magnetic theory, geology, and mathematics.42 With the Jesuits,
one comes to expect rigid adherence to official positions, with respect to
doctrines considered dangerous to piety, combined with some tolerance
of doctrines considered non-threatening.
Just such a strange a mix of conservative and progressive views can
often be seen; to give just one example from among many, I wish to point
briefly to the public defense of some theses in physics from , by Jean
Tournemine, a student at La Flche.43 In the section about the world and
the heavens we are told: the stars and firmament are not moved by an
internal principle, but by intelligences.44 On the other hand, we are also
told: Apostolic authority teaches us that there are three heavens. The first
is that of the planets, whose substance is fluid, as shown by astronomical
observations; the second is the firmament, a solid body as its name
indicates; and the third is the empyrean, in which the stars are specifically
distinct from the heavens. This odd theory of the heavens breaks from
42 Cf. Heilbron .
43 Joannes Tournemyne (La Flche, ), as edited in Rochemonteix , vol. IV,
pp. .
44 This appears to be the rejection of some elements of scholastic physics that could
have led to the principle of inertia, such as the fourteenth-century doctrines of a circular
impetus for the heavens. Cf. Oresme and Albert of Saxony .
chapter one
of the homocentric spheres made fluid. See Grant . The reason why this theory
of the heavens seems to be Tychonic is that solidity is attributed to the firmament, or
the outermost heavenly body, containing the fluid universe of the planets. Fluidity is
attributed to the world of the planets because of astronomical observations. This seems
to allude to the kind of observations of comets and novas that Tycho de Brahe used to
argue against the solidity of planetary heavenly spheres. The Tychonic system, in which
the earth was the center of the universe, with the planets revolving around the sun as
their center, was a compromise between the old Aristotelian-Ptolemaic system and the
heliocentric Copernican system; it did not require a new physics for the motion of the
earth. It did require, however, a fluid planetary heaven, since the paths of some planets
intersected. (See chapter .) Descartes discusses astronomical systems, including Tychos
in Principles III , .
47 See Reif .
48 It is difficult to tell what exactly the student argued in his thesis. But there were
many popular experiments at the time claiming to refute Copernican astronomy; for
example, cannon balls fired the same distance east and west were used as evidence
against the rotation of the earth required by the Copemican system. According to modern
principles of physics, these results cannot be counted against the rotation of the earth, so
that the students admission that popular experiments cannot defeat Copernicanism is
interesting. During the same period, defenders of Copernicanism, such as Gassendi and
Mersenne, used similar experiments in defense of Copernicanism: a stone falling from
the mast of a moving ship falls parallel to the mast (Gassendi ), reported by Mersenne
descartes and the last scholastics
Descartes request for objections and his sending out copies did not bear
much fruit. Early on, Descartes was uncertain whether he would receive
a favorable reaction from the Jesuits. He wrote to Huygens:
As for my book, I do not know what opinion the worldly people will have
of it; as for the people of the schools, I understand that they are keeping
quiet, and that, displeased with not finding anything in it to grasp in order
to exercise their arguments, they are content in saying that, if what is
contained in it were true, all their philosophy would have to be false.49
But he was hopeful; in the same letter he wrote:
I have just received a letter from one of the Jesuits at La Flche, in which I
find as much approbation as I would desire from anyone. Thus far he does
not find difficulty with anything I wanted to explain, but only with what
I did not want to write; as a result, he takes the occasion to request my
physics and my metaphysics with great insistence. And since I understand
the communication and union that exists among those of that order, the
testimony of one of them alone is enough to allow me to hope that I will
have them all on my side.50
Ultimately, Descartes received a number of responses; among them was
one from Libertus Fromondus, an anti-atomist, one from Plempius, a stu-
dent of Fromondus, and a third from Jean Baptiste Morin, the progressive
Aristotelian.51 Fromondus treated Descartes as an atomist and sent him
(in his ). It should also be pointed out that calling the Copernican system false and
foolhardy is less harsh than calling it foolish and absurd in philosophy and formally
heretical, as did the Church in . See below for Descartes reaction to the Churchs
condemnation of Galileos heliocentrism in .
49 AT II, .
50 AT II, .
51 Descartes was asked by Mersenne whether foreigners formulated better objections
than the French. Descartes replied that he did not count any of those received as French
other than Morins objections. He referred to a dispute with Petit, which he dismissed,
saying that he did not take Petit seriously but simply mocked him in return. (For
more on the exchange between Descartes and Petit, see Jean-Luc Marion, The Place
of the Objections in the Development of Cartesian Metaphysics, in Ariew and Grene
, pp. .) Descartes then listed the objections of the foreigners: Fromondus from
chapter one
a tract against Epicureans and atomists that he had written earlier; but
he did not respond to Descartes reply. Descartes wrote to Huygens con-
cerning the exchange: As for Fromondus, the small disagreement we had
is not worth your knowing about . . . In any case, this dispute between us
was more like a game of chess; we remained good friends.52 The cor-
respondence with Plempius was lengthier, with many letters debating
biological matters, such as the theory of the circulation of the blood,
going back and forth.53 A most interesting exchange occurred between
Descartes and Jean Baptiste Morin, who wrote to Descartes on Febru-
ary , with some comments on astronomy and Descartes theory of
light.
In these letters, Morin engaged Descartes in some provocative meta-
philosophical issues. First, Morin complained that Descartes, whose
mind was used to the most subtle and lofty speculations of mathematics,
closed himself off and barricaded himself in his own terms and manners
of speaking, in such a way that he seemed at first almost impregnable.54
He then stated,
However, I do not know what to expect from you, for some have led me
to believe that, if I used the terms of the schools, even a little, you would
instantly judge me more worthy of disdain than of reply. But, reading your
discourse, I do not judge you the enemy of the schools, as you are depicted
. . . The schools seem only to have failed in that they were more occupied
by speculation in the search for terms needed to treat things, than in the
inquiry into the very truth of things by good experiments; thus they are
poor in the latter and rich in the former. That is why I am like you in this
respect; I seek the truth of things only in nature and do not place my trust
in the schools, which I use only for their terms.55
Descartes answer is intriguing. First, he assured Morin that he did not try
to close off and barricade himself in obscure terms as a defensive move,
and that if he did make use of mathematical demonstrations, it is because
they taught him to discover the truth, instead of disguising it.56 He then
stated,
Louvain, Plempius, an anonymous Jesuit from Louvain, and someone from the Hague.
AT II, : CSMK .
52 AT II, . The correspondence between Descartes and Fromondus as well as that
As for my disdain for the schools that youve been told about, it can
only have been imagined by people who know neither my habits nor my
dispositions. And though, in my essays, I made little use of terms known
only by the learned, that is not to say that I disapprove of them, but only
that I wanted to make myself understood also by others.57
Later on, in the same letter, defending himself against one of Morins
objections, Descartes accepted some scholastic distinctions; trying to
impress Morin with his knowledge of scholastic terminology, he pep-
pered his letter with such terms: I freely use here the terms of the schools
in order that you do not judge that I disdain them.58 He insisted on
responding to Morin in forma; he threw in some terms and phrases from
scholastic disputations, such as distinguo, concedo totum, nego consequen-
tiam, and he even suggested that he was taking the term infinite synca-
tegorematice so that the schools would have nothing to object to in this
matter.59
There is an amusing reply to Descartes letter, as a marginal comment
to a letter from Mersenne to Descartes:
You so reassured and enriched us by the excellent replies you made to Mr.
Morin and me, that I assure you, instead of the sols of postage on the
package, seeing what it contained, I would have willingly given ecus. We
read the reply together; and Mr. Morin found your style so beautiful that
I advise you never to change it. For your analogies and your curiosities
satisfy more than what all others produce . . . Moreover, you succeeded
very well, in the reply to Mr. Morin, by showing that you do not disdain,
or at least, you are not ignorant of Aristotles philosophy. That is what
contributed toward the increase in esteem Mr. Morin testifies as having for
you. It is also what I assure those who, deceived by the clarity and precision
of your stylewhich you can lower to make yourself understood by the
common manbelieve that you do not understand scholastic philosophy
at all; I let them know that you understand scholastic philosophy just as
well as the masters who teach it and who seem most proud of their own
ability.60
57 AT II, .
58 AT II, .
59 AT II, . In forma means in logical form; distinguo, concedo totum, and nego
The greater esteem Morin felt for Descartes did not prevent him from
sending a second letter, in the style of Descartes response, still objecting
about the uses of terms, etc. Descartes responded to the letter, but with
less enthusiasm. Morin wrote a third letter, but Descartes stopped the
correspondence there. Descartes wrote to Mersenne, I will not reply to
Mr. Morin, since he does not want me to. Also, there is nothing in his last
letter that gives me the occasion to reply with something useful; between
us, it seems to me that his thoughts are now farther from mine than they
were at the beginning, so that we will never come to any agreement.61
disputes. On the other hand, as we shall see, even Descartes was aware of his own
shortcomings in this respect, that is, aware that he has not read scholastic philosophy
for the last fifteen years or so.
61 November , AT II, . There may be a bit of bad faith in Descartes rela-
tions with Morin which the following event may demonstrate. Mersenne sent Descartes
Morins book Quod Deus Sit asking him for his opinion about its argument for the exis-
tence of God, which is set out in more geometrico, with definitions, axioms, and theorems.
Descartes responded to Mersenne in a typical fashion:
I have read through Mr. Morins booklet. Its chief defect is that he treats of the
infinite everywhere as if his mind was above it and he could comprehend its
properties. That is a common fault with nearly everyone. I have tried with care
to avoid it, for I have never treated the infinite except to submit myself to it, and
not in the least to determine what it is and what it is not.
Descartes then he added some specific criticisms:
in his sixteenth theorem, where he begins to try to prove that God exists, he bases
his reasoning on the fact that he claims to have refuted the motion of the earth,
and on the fact that heaven rotates around it, which he has by no means proved.
. . . And thus all that he says right up to the end is far removed from the geometrical
evidence and certitude that he would seem to be promising at the beginning.
(AT II, )
It is true that Morin tries to prove the existence of God in his th theorem. Morins
argument goes as follows: a finite being exists; hence, an infinite being exists from which
the finite being derives its existence; it cannot be said that there was once an infinite being
from which the finite thing derives its existence, but that it no longer exists; such a being
would have been circumscribed by limits to its duration, and hence not infinite, which is
a contradiction. It is true as well that in his th theorem Morin tries to refute the motion
of the earth based on the fact that heaven rotates around it. This argument goes like this:
the terrestrial globe is finite and the machinery of the universe moves in a circle; hence
the machinery is finite, for otherwise it would occupy infinite space and would have to
cross this space in finite time, which is impossible. But if one looks at all carefully, Morins
proof for the existence of God is independent of his rejection of the motion of the earth.
Theorem requires theorem , Every finite thing derives its existence from an infinite
Being, and definition , An infinite being is whatever is circumscribed by no limits in
its being. Theorem requires a bunch of earlier definitions, axioms, and theorems,
but certainly not the later theorem . Descartes and Morin might be in agreement that
the order of proof in geometric demonstration requires, that, quoting Descartes, 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
descartes and the last scholastics
Descartes did not publish just six Meditations; he presented his work to
a select group of scholars before official publication so that their com-
ments and his replies would be issued in a single volume. Thus the edition
of was not the Meditations alone but a compendium: introductory
essays that set the new text in relation to questions already raised about
the Discourse on Method four years earlier, the six Meditations them-
selves, and then the objections of other scholars, together with Descartes
replies to those objections.
depends solely on what has gone before. But while Descartes projects his own criterion
on Morin, here he is clearly also applying an even more stringent criterion for Morin, that
what has gone before must relate to what comes later.
62 Regulae, Rule II: AT X, ; CSM I, .
63 AT VII, .
chapter one
The chief person who managed the circulation of the text of the Med-
itations to most of its critics was Descartes correspondent Mersenne, a
member of the Catholic order of Minims, who from his cell in the con-
vent of the Minims in Paris served as the center and informal coordinator
of a wide and diverse intellectual circle. Descartes was in constant corre-
spondence with his monastic friend from his retreat in the Netherlands.
However, it was the Meditations plus the First Set of Objections and Replies
that Mersenne received for further circulation. To start the ball rolling,
Descartes asked his friends Jan Albert Bannius and Augustinus Alstenius
Bloemaert to write some objections; they, in turn, asked the Dutch priest
Caterus (Johannes de Kater) to do so. Caterus First Set of Objections,
together with Descartes Replies and the manuscript of the Meditations
were sent to France to be printed, Descartes leaving Mersenne to orga-
nize the rest, telling him that he would be glad if people make as many
objections as possible and the strongest they can find.64 Five more sets
of objections were obtained, making six altogether in the first edition; a
seventh set followed in the second edition of .65
As we have said, Descartes prefaced his Meditations with introductory
essays: the Letter of Dedication to the Doctors of the Sorbonne, Preface to
the Reader, and Synopsis of the Meditations. A passage from the Preface
to the Reader can illuminate the setting for the Meditations. Descartes
refers to the two issues of God and the human soul from the title of the
64 AT III, .
65 The objectors are as follows: . Caterus, with remarks addressed by him to his friends
Bannius and Bloemart, to be conveyed to Descartes. . Theologians and philosophers,
described in the French edition of as collected by Mersenne. . Thomas Hobbes,
described in as a famous English philosopher. . Antoine Arnauld, a theology
doctorate student at the Sorbonne, whose objections were addressed to Mersenne as
intermediary. . Pierre Gassendi, philosopher and historian. Descartes became very
angry with Gassendi when the latter published Disquisitio Metaphysica, a separate edition
with rejoinders; so, for the French edition of the Meditations, Descartes asked
his translator Clerselier to omit Gassendis objections and to substitute instead a letter
produced by his friends, in which he would answer a selection of Gassendis strongest
arguments. . A group described in as various theologians and philosophers, once
more collected by Mersenne, together with an appendix containing the arguments of
a group of philosophers and geometers. . The Jesuit mathematician Pierre Bourdin.
Descartes received Bourdins voluminous packet of objections in January , when his
Dutch publisher Elsevier was already printing the second edition of the Meditations. So
Descartes had them printed in the second edition, with his replies interspersed within
the objections. Since the printer was slow to complete the volume Descartes also added
a long letter to the provincial of the Jesuits in the le de France, Father Jacques Dinet, in
which he complained of Bourdins methods and suggested that the Jesuit Order should
dissociate itself from him.
descartes and the last scholastics
Descartes then refers to his offer, at the end of Discourse VI, to respond
to criticisms. This is where he asserts that there were only two objections
worth noting; he then replies briefly to them before undertaking a
more precise examination of them.66 Thus the Discourse does not just
provide an early version of the Meditations; it constitutes the setting
for the work and it provokes two preliminary objections that must be
answered initially and then more fully in the Meditations. As Jean-Luc
Marion asserts, contrary to a widespread legend, Descartes is neither
here nor elsewhere anything like a solitary, or even autistic, thinker,
soliloquizing, in the manner perhaps of a Spinoza.67 Marion details
the steps taken by Descartes (between and ) to answer the
two objections made by Pierre Petit to the metaphysical portion of the
Discourse, objections the Meditations attempts to answer more fully.
Marion concludes that not only would it be illegitimate to read the
Meditations in abstraction from the Objections and Replies, with which
they intentionally form an organic whole, but it would also be wholly
illegitimate to read them otherwise than as replies to the objections
evoked by the Discourse.68
Marion is right to insist that we should think of Part IV, the metaphys-
ical portion of the Discourse, and the Meditations as forming a respon-
sorial schema of objections and replies. Even the first sentence of the
Meditations sends the reader back to another time, outside the frame of
the Meditations: Several years have now passed since I first realized how
numerous were the false opinions that in my youth I had taken to be
true, and thus how doubtful were all those I had subsequently built on
them. The first series of thoughts from Meditation I is set in a histori-
cal, autobiographical past, Descartes having realized that he had to raze
66 AT VII, .
67 Marion , pp. .
68 Marion , p. .
chapter one
everything to the ground and begin again from the original foundations,
if he wanted to establish anything firm and lasting in the sciences. As
Descartes asserts, he waited until he reached a point in his life that was
so timely that no more suitable time for undertaking these plans of action
would come to pass. But if the first sentence of the Meditations sends us to
the Discourse, the Discourse itself, like the Meditations, also sends us out-
side itself. The first sentence of the metaphysical portion of the Discourse
states I do not know whether I ought to tell you about the first medita-
tions I engaged in there; for they are so metaphysical and so out of the
ordinary that perhaps they will not be to everyones liking.69 The there
referred to by Descartes is The Netherlands, to which Descartes moved in
or ; so in , Descartes tells us: it is exactly eight years ago
that this desirethat is, the desire to begin to reject totally the opinions
that had once been able to slip into his head and to seek the true method
for arriving at the knowledge of everything of which his mind would be
capable70made him resolve to take my leave of all those places where
I might have acquaintances, and to retire here, to the Netherlands.71 But
Descartes places the origin of that desire further back about nine years
from , to the famous stove-heated room in , in Germany, near
Ulm: Nevertheless, those nine years slipped by before I had as yet taken
any stand regarding the difficulties commonly debated among learned
men, or had begun to seek the foundations of any philosophy that was
more certain than the commonly accepted one.72
Thus the project of the Meditations began with a resolve to examine all
the truths for the knowledge of which human reason suffices,73 which,
according to Descartes, he carried out nine years later, circa , having
spent the first nine months of his stay in the Netherlands working on
metaphysics:
Now I am of the opinion that all those to whom God has given the use of
this reason are obliged to use it chiefly to try to know him and to know
themselves. It is in this way that I have tried to begin my studies [ . . .].
The first nine months I was in this country I worked at nothing else, and I
believe you have already heard me say that I had planned to put something
69 AT VI, .
70 AT VI, .
71 AT VI, .
72 AT VI, .
73 What in Rule is called the most noble example of all, a task that should be
undertaken at least once in his life by anyone who is in all seriousness eager to attain
excellence of mind (AT X, ).
descartes and the last scholastics
74 AT I, .
75 Perhaps I may one day complete a little Treatise on Metaphysics, which I have begun
when in Friesland, in which I set out principally to prove the existence of God and of our
souls when they are separate from the body, from which their immortality follows (AT I,
).
76 AT I, .
77 To Mersenne, November , , AT II, ; see also To Mersenne, March , ,
cartes intention, Gueroult cites a letter to Mersenne (AT III, ) in which Descartes
asserts to proceed by topics is only good for those whose reasons are all unconnected;
[. . .] it is impossible to construct good proofs in this way.
chapter one
79 Gueroult , vol. I, p. .
80 AT III, .
81 AT VII, .
82 AT I, .
83 Gueroult , vol. I, p. xx.
84 One can distinguish between the motion of the earth (as false and foolish in
philosophy) and immobility of the sun (as formally heretical), but it would not be
necessary in this context, since Descartes does not make use of such a distinction and
the Church declaring the proposition false is sufficient to cause a serious problem for
Descartes.
descartes and the last scholastics
hesitates: I know very well that it could be said that everything the
Inquisitors of Rome have decided is not for all that automatically an
article of faith, and that it is first necessary for the Council to pass on
it. But he decides: I am not so much in love with my own opinions as
to want to make use of such exceptions, in order to have the means of
maintaining them. [ . . . ] I would not for anything in the world maintain
them against the authority of the church.85 So he stops the publication of
Le Monde.86 But this does not prevent him, later on, from publishing the
Principles of PhilosophyLe Monde having been taught to speak Latin,
as he says87which contains a discussion of the heretical proposition.
In fact, Descartes has no problem ultimately keeping most of his system
together with the negation of the condemned proposition; he decides that
strictly speaking the earth does not move, any more than the planets88
and no motion should be attributed to the earth even if motion is taken
in the loose sense, in accordance with ordinary usage.89
So, although Descartes does at times claim the complete dependence
of his principles on each other such that none of them can be changed
without the whole set collapsing, it is also obvious that he did make such
changes (even to principles he claimed could not be changed). In fact, it is
even clear that Descartes at times understood that he was making changes
to his doctrine and at times wanted others to know that he was doing
so. Descartes project itself seems to belie the treatment of the system as
a single bloc of certainty: Why bother with other peoples objections if
they had no real possibility of altering the doctrine objected to? Were the
objections not going to be taken seriously by Descartes?
Descartes was keenly aware of the difficulty. After receiving Arnaulds
objections to the Meditations, he wrote to Mersenne on March , ,
I am sending you at last my reply to Arnaulds objections, and I ask you to
change the following things in my metaphysics, thus letting it be known in
this way that I have deferred to his judgment, and so that others, seeing
how ready I am to follow his advice, may tell me more frankly what
reasons they have for disagreeing with me, if they have any, and may be
less stubborn in wanting to oppose me without reason.90
85 AT I, .
86 For more on Le Monde and its historical context, see Gaukroger , chap. .
87 To Huygens, January , , AT III, .
88 Principles III, art. .
89 Principles III, art. .
90 AT III, .
chapter one
91 AT III, .
92 The terminology is standard and comes from Caterus. God as cause of himself is
usually taken negatively, meaning not from another, and not positively, meaning giving
existence to himself (AT VII, ). Descartes seems to reply that he considers God as
efficient cause of himself taken positively: When these people say that something is
derived from itself, they are in the habit of understanding only that it has no cause. [. . .]
But there is another rendering, a positive one, which has been sought from the truth of
things and from which alone my argument proceeds (AT VII, ).
93 Beyssade , pp. .
94 AT VII, . Beyssade , pp. .
descartes and the last scholastics
95 Beyssade , pp. .
96 AT III, .
97 AT III, .
98 AT III, .
99 For more on the development of the concept of self-cause, see Marion , pp.
.
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bare of the architectonics of the Meditations; of course, we can always disagree with any
of Gueroults results, including his internal method.
104 Descartes world is a plenum of subtle matter (ether, or first matter) whose action
is used by Descartes to explain such diverse phenomena as gravitation and light. In the
theses, Bourdin is complaining about Descartes use of subtle matter for the propagation
of light in Optics I, pp. , as a blind man can sense the bodies around him using his
cane (AT VI : CSM I ).
105 Baillet , II, . Bourdin was professor of humanities at La Flche (
), of rhetoric (), and mathematics (). He was sent to Paris, to the Collge
de Clermont (later known as the Collge Louis-le-Grand) in . By , when
Bourdin debated with Descartes, he had already published three books, Prima geometriae
elementa, following Euclid (Bourdin ), Geometria, nova methodo (Bourdin ),
and Le cours de mathmatique (Bourdin , first published circa ); he would
shortly be publishing his fourth, L introduction la mathmatique (Bourdin ).
Bourdins mathematics, like most Jesuit mathematics, can be characterized by its practical
bent. This is made clear by Bourdins Cours de mathmatique, which contains materials on
fortifications, terrain, military architecture, and sections on cosmography and the use of
a terrestrial globe; it is also supported by the subject of his two posthumous publications:
L architecture militaire ou l art de fortifier les places regulires et irregulires and Le dessein
ou la perspective militaire (Bourdin a and b). See Ariew .
106 AT III .
chapter one
107 AT III, . In another letter, Descartes tells Mersenne that he is shocked by the
velitatio of Bourdin, for he does not have a single objection to anything Descartes has
written, but rather attacks doctrines Descartes does not hold. AT III, .
108 AT III, ; CSMK .
109 That is, quibbles or cavils. See AT III, , , , for example.
110 Bourdin wrote the Seventh Objections, which were not received by Descartes in time
for the first printing of the Meditations and Objections and Replies, but were included in
the second printing.
111 AT III, .
descartes and the last scholastics
better than I once thought. Toward that end, I beg of you to send me the
names of authors who have written textbooks in philosophy and who have
the most following among the Jesuits, and whether there are new ones from
twenty years ago; I remember only the Coimbrans, Toletus, and Rubius.
I would also like to know whether there is someone who has written a
summary of all of scholastic philosophy and who has a following, for this
would spare me the time to read all their heavy tomes. It seems to me that
there was a Chartreux or a Feuillant who had accomplished this, but I do
not remember his name.112
The scholastics Descartes remembered, the Coimbrans, Toletus, and Ru-
bius, were all Jesuit textbook authors Descartes probably read at La
Flche. The Coimbrans (the Conimbricenses), were professors at the
Colegio das Artes, Coimbra (Portugal), who published a series of ency-
clopedic commentaries on Aristotles works between and . The
most noted of the Coimbrans was Petrus de Fonseca, who contributed
to the Ratio studiorum and who published separately his own commen-
taries on the Metaphysics and the De Anima.113 Franciscus Toletus was a
professor at the Collegio Romano () who published numerous
commentaries on Aristotles works, including an important Logic (),
Physics (), and De Anima ().114 And Antonius Rubius taught
philosophy in Mexico; he published commentaries on Aristotles Logic,
the Logica mexicana (), Physics (), De Caelo (), and De
Anima ().115
We do not have Mersennes reply, but presumably, he identified Eus-
tachius a Sancto Paulo as the Feuillant that Descartes remembered having
written a summary of all of scholastic philosophy in one volume, since in
Descartes next letter to Mersenne Descartes wrote: I have purchased the
Philosophy of Brother Eustachius a Sancto Paulo, which seems to me to be
the best book ever written on this matter; I would like to know whether
the author still lives.116 Eustachius a Sancto Paulo (Asseline) entered the
Feuillants, a Cistercian Order, in , and was professor of theology
at the Sorbonne. He published the Summa philosophica quadripartita
de rebus dialecticis, moralibus, physicis, et metaphysicis in . It was
published again and again throughout the first half of the century, until
.117
the genre, Dupleix . Scipion Dupleix was more a historian than a philosopher,
summarizing the school leaming of his day as succinctly as possible, for an audience that
is not comfortable with Latin, that is, an unschooled audience. Cf. Faye .
122 AT III .
descartes and the last scholastics
someone; but it is also true that I have completely lost the intent to refute
this philosophy; for I see that it is so absolutely and so clearly destroyed
by means of the establishment of my philosophy alone, that no other
refutation is needed.127
The Eustachius project is instructive for many reasons. One of the infer-
ences one should draw from it is that Descartes was not well acquainted
with scholastic philosophy in the period of his greatest work, during
. When he finally formulated his mature works, he departed
either dramatically or by degrees from a scholastic tradition he no longer
knew very well. Of course, Descartes was taught scholastic philosophy
in his youth at La Flche, but he abandoned his study of it for about
twenty years, roughly between and , and he picked it up again
only in , to arm himself against the expected attacks of the Jesuits.
We should expect that Descartes was generally well-versed in scholas-
tic philosophy128 only when writing his earliest works, the Rules for the
Direction of the Mind for example. (The remnants of scholasticism in
Descartes mature works, the Discourse and the Meditations, might there-
fore be deceptive for the interpreter.) Finally, from on, in the Replies
to the Objections to the Meditations and in the Principles of Philosophy,
Descartes relearned scholastic philosophy (and scholastic terminology)
and began the process of reinterpreting his thoughts (or translating his
doctrines) to make them more compatible with scholasticism.129 One can
detect Descartes subtle shifts in doctrine or terminology by contrasting
his early and later writingsroughly, those before and after .
For example, in the aftermath of Galileos condemnation, Descartes
change in view about motion and the motion of the earth resulted in a
politically more tenable position. Descartes was pessimistic in Le monde
127 AT III, . For Descartes keeping open the option to write such a philosophy as a
threat against the Jesuits, see AT III, , . One has to remember that there were
political and social considerations in the project of comparing the two philosophies, the
consequences of which were not lost on Descartes. For example, Descartes considered
publishing his project in Latin and calling it Summa Philosophiae for tactical reasons in
what he called a scholastic war; he said to Huygens,
Perhaps these scholastic wars will cause my Le Monde to be brought into the world.
I believe it would be out already, were it not that I would want first to teach it to speak
Latin. I would call it Summa Philosophiae, so that it would be more easily introduced into
the conversation of the people of the schools, ministers as well as Jesuits, who are now
persecuting it and trying to smother it before its birth (AT III, p. ).
128 But probably only the scholastic philosophy represented by the Coimbrans, Toletus,
ters and .
descartes and the last scholastics
determinate place for the motion of a body. The body then might simulta-
neously change and not change its place: it might change its external place
(its situation) and not change its internal place (its extension or shape).
Given that Descartes thought it impossible to discover any truly motion-
less points in the universe, he also thought that nothing has any endur-
ing, fixed and determinate place, except insofar as its place is determined
in our minds. Thus, for Descartes, place, properly speaking, is internal
place, or space, which is to be identified with the nature of body, that is,
its extension, but we can mentally construct a situation, or external place,
as the immobile reference for the motion of bodies.136
One can multiply such instances, but perhaps one or two examples
might suffice to show that these instances are not limited to the more
scientific aspects of Descartes philosophy. One of the Cartesian philo-
sophical doctrines under attack was the doctrine of material falsity. In
the Meditations Descartes characterized material falsity as occurring in
ideas, when they represent non-things as things.137 Descartes exam-
ple of material falsity was his idea of cold, which, though it is merely
the absence of heat, represents cold as something real and positive. As
Arnauld rightly pointed out, in his Objections to the Meditations, if cold
is merely an absence, then there cannot be an idea of cold which repre-
sents it to me as a positive thing.138 Descartes response seems to have
been a shift away from his initial position; that is, Descartes asserted in
the Replies that the reason he called the idea of cold materially false was
that he was unable to judge whether or not what it represented to him was
something positive existing outside his sensation.139 But there was also
an interesting addition in Descartes reply. Descartes seems to have used
the occasion to show off his knowledge of scholastic philosophy in an
cannot adequately represent; see, for example, Wilson , pp. and M. Bolton,
Confused and Obscure Ideas of Sense, in A.E. Rorty , pp. .
143 For a typical discussion of scholastic and Cartesian theory of distinctions, see
Ghisalberti .
144 Principles I, art. .
145 Principles I, art. .
146 Principles I, art. .
147 Surez , disp. , , no. .
148 Surez , disp. , , nos. .
149 Surez , disp. , , no. , .
150 Surez , disp. , , no. , .
descartes and the last scholastics
reason of a thing conceived in some way from the same thing conceived
in a different way.151
Descartes theory of distinction seems clearly important to his philos-
ophy. One can point to the fact that the subtitle of the Meditations and
the title of Meditation VI indicate that the aim of that work, like that of
the beginning of the Principles, is the demonstration of the real distinc-
tion between mind and body, that is, the demonstration is of a real, not
of a modal distinction or distinction of reason. The thesis that the mind
is a mode of the body is certainly not Descartes, though it is that of his
erstwhile disciple Regius,152 one that Descartes explicitly rejects.153 There
are two further occasions in the published Meditations in which
Descartes talks about the real distinction between mind and body. More-
over, there is also an occasion in which he refers to a distinction of rea-
son, though that instance, in Meditation III, in which he discusses the
difference between Gods conservation and Gods creation of the world,
is perhaps not phrased in any technical language; what Descartes says is
creation differs from conservation only by way of reason (adeo ut con-
servatione sola ratione a creatione differre).154
But having just argued that Descartes was not a good reader of texts
and that the remnants of scholasticism in Descartes mature works, such
as the Meditations, might be deceptive for the interpreter, I do not wish
to conclude without careful examination that the post- Surezian
distinctions from the Principles are necessarily present in the pre-
Meditations. There are four cases of Descartes referring to the real dis-
tinction between mind and body to consider in the pre- work: ) in
the subtitle of the work; ) in the title to Meditation VI; ) in the Letter
of Dedication to the Sorbonne; and ) in the Synopsis of the Meditations.
Descartes revised the subtitle of his work between its Latin editions:
originally entitled Meditations on First Philosophy, it was subtitled in
which the existence of God and the immortality of the soul are demon-
strated, in the first edition, and in which the existence of God and
the distinction between the human soul and body are demonstrated, in
the second.155 Moreover, the French edition title is similar
Baillet, in the abridgment to his biography of Descartes, asserts that immortalitas in the
first subtitle was a misprint for immaterialitas (Baillet , p. ). Others argue that the
chapter one
subtitle was Mersennes responsibility and his mistake. Neither hypothesis seems likely.
It is true that Descartes says to Mersenne on November , , I am finally sending
you my work on metaphysics, which I have not yet put a title to, in order to make you its
godfather and leave you the power to baptize it (AT III, ; see also AT III, ), but
Descartes does suggest titles and subtitles to Mersenne (AT III, , , and ). I find
convincing the following passage from a Descartes letter to Mersenne of December ,
: As for what you say, that I have not said a word about the immortality of the soul,
you should not be surprised. For I could not prove that God cannot annihilate it, but
only that it is of a nature entirely distinct from that of the body, and consequently it is not
bound by nature to die with it. (AT III, ; see also AT III, ). It is Mersenne who
seems to have queried Descartes about the appropriateness of the subtitle with respect to
the contents of the Meditations and Descartes who appears to be defending it.
156 AT III, .
157 The earliest mention of the Letter to the Sorbonne is November , (to Gibieuf,
158 AT VII, . The issue is that if there is a third distinction between real and of reason,
one cannot conclude that a difference between ideas entails a difference between things.
The argument is made more fully by Duhamel, who believes that Descartes changes his
theory of distinctions (Duhamel , pp. ).
159 AT VII, .
160 See AT VII, (For our distinguished author admits in his reply to the theologian
similarly argues for real, formal and modal, and rational distinctions in
the context of debates, both real and terminological, between Thomas
and Scotus.164
169 See Eustachius folding Schema generale between parts II and III of the Summa.
170 Principles IV, art. .
171 Marion , chap. , pp. .
chapter one
radices primum scilicet Principia, et causas corporis naturalis; corticem, accidentia cor-
poris naturalis; truncum, mundum: et ramos, coelos nempe, elementa, mixta spectabi-
mus . . . de Raconis , pars III, p. . I am indebted to Daniel Garber for pointing
out this passage to me. The whole of de Raconis Physics is arranged according to the
metaphor; for example, the title of the disputation on the heavens is Rami Physicae
Arboris, Ramus Supremus, seu Coelum et Sphaera; that of the disputation on the ele-
ments is Ramus Secumdus [sic] Physicae Arboris, seu Elementa.
descartes and the last scholastics
order of topics is good only for those whose reasoning is disjointed, and who can say as
much about one difficulty as about another. It is interesting to note that these comments
were made just before the more extensive comments in Replies II and just before Descartes
had received the Quod Deus Sit of J.-B. Morin, which gives a geometrical presentation of
proofs of Gods existencesee Garber .
177 Objections II, AT VII, p. ; IXa, p. .
178 Replies II, AT VII, pp. ; IXa, pp. .
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179 veram viam ostendit per quam res methodice et tanquam a priori inventa est,
AT VII, p. ; contra per viam oppositam et tanquam a posteriori quaesitum (etsi saepe
ipsa probatio sit in hac magis a priori quam in illa), AT VII, p. .
180 That is, tanquam a priori by et fait voir comment les effets dependent des causes,
and tanquam a posteriori by comme en examinant les causes par leur effets, AT IXa,
pp. .
181 For example, Gueroult .
182 For example, Hintikka and Remes ; see also Hintikka .
183 For example, Buchdahl , pp. .
184 Gaukroger .
185 It is interesting to note that Adam and Tannerys index gnral refers the reader
to volumes VII and IX (the Meditations) and volume X (pp. of the Regulae)
for analysis and synthesis. Strictly speaking, analysis and synthesis do not occur in the
Regulae. There are, of course, references in Descartes to the analysis of the ancients and
to analysis in mathematical contexts. Cf. Discourse, AT VI, p. ; for the analysis of the
geometers and the analysis of the ancients, see AT VI, p. , and Rule of the Rgulae,
AT X, p. . Descartes himself says that he has rarely used the word. Complaining about
Bourdin saying that he had not read the Discourse, Descartes replied that it seems unlikely,
since he has often complained about my analysis . . . even though I did not treat of it
anywhere else, and did not even speak of the word analysis except in this Discourse on
Method about which he said he had not read. AT VII, .
186 For more on the effect that Descartes reading of Eustachius might have had on him,
Regulae are two aspects of the same method, whereas analysis and syn-
thesis in Replies II are two reasons of demonstration or two manners of
writing. Similarly, Descartes did distinguish between individual things
in relation to the order they have with respect to our knowledge and
as they really exist,187 but again, there is no real reason to connect this
distinction from the Regulae with analysis and synthesis.188
All the above distinctions were available in school philosophy. The
distinction between the order of knowledge and the order of being
was standard in the Aristotelian and Thomistic corpus. The notion of
order was not foreign to Aristotles Physics itself; Book I of the Physics
began with a distinction between things most knowable for us and most
knowable in themselves.189 Aristotle indicated that the first book of the
Physics makes up a unity that could be followed up with a study of
metaphysics or with the rest of natural philosophy, that is, the other
books of the Physics together with the De Caelo, Meteorology, De Anima,
etc.190 Aristotles comments were themselves commented upon, yielding
interesting discussions and distinctions, including Aquinas, that what is
known better to us and known better in itself should be correlated with
the singular and universal, respectively.191
One can also find the distinction between analysis and synthesis. For
example, there is the following definition of analysis and its etymological
derivation in Dupleixs La logique:
Analytic (in the same way as Resolutive in French) is a Greek word derived
from Analysis, that is to say, Resolution; it is nothing more than a regress or
return of a thing to its principles and (to speak more clearly) a dissolution
187 Regulae, AT X, p. .
188 I should emphasize that I am not claiming that a real inconsistency arises by
conflating the two distinctions (except, perhaps about the status of the Principles as
synthetic). For discussions of these problems, see Garber and Cohen and Curley
.
189 ab. This is the forerunner of the ordo cognoscendi and the ordo
essendi.
190 ab.
191 Aquinas , lectio , sec. . There are also the critiques of Aristotle by such
Platonists as Proclus: And certainly beauty and order are common to all branches of
mathematics, as are the method of proceeding from things better known to things we
seek to know and the reverse path from the latter to the former, the methods called
analysis and synthesis, Commentary on Book I of Euclids Elements, first translated into
Latin circa . That Proclus methods are intended to be a critique of Aristotle can be
seen by understanding that, for Proclus, analysis proceeds from universal conclusions to
the universal premises that will establish them and synthesis from universal premises to
the universal conclusions that follow from them.
chapter one
Of course, some of these distinctions did get confused with one another;
Eustachius even spoke of analytic and synthetic order or method in an
elaboration of the Aristotelian distinction between the order of knowl-
edge and the order of being.
In one of the Preliminary questions on the Physics, Eustachius asked
whether there is an order to be followed in the different parts of phi-
losophy,193 and he asserted that there is an order appropriate both for
the nature of things and doctrine, namely the order going from the
most simple things to those more composite, from the principles to that
from which they are constituted, at the same time progressing from the
most universal things to the lesser universals, to the genera and species.
Eustachius also asserts that Aristotle made use of such an order or
method in his writings on the various parts of philosophy. According
to Eustachius, Aristotle in the Physics started with principles, causes,
and the general properties of natural things then progressed partly in
analytic order and partly in synthetic order194 from the most universal
principles to the singular species of natural bodies; he then first differ-
entiated the inanimate bodiesfrom the simplest, the heavens and ele-
ments in the De Caelo to the mixtures and more composite bodies in the
Meteorology.195 As we have previously indicated, Eustachius ordered his
own exposition into three parts: . natural bodies in general, . inani-
mate natural bodies, and . animate natural bodies.196 Eustachius actu-
ally rearranged Aristotles topics and even rearranged the Physics itself in
of the Logic: Methodus sive ordo resolutionis, quae dicitur analysis . . . and Quoniam
vero analysis, id est, divisioni opponitur synthesis, id est, composito . . . Eustachius a
Sancto Paulo , pp. .
195 Eustachius continues by enumerating the animate bodies of the De Anima and Parva
naturalia, then the books on Plants and the history, generation and parts of animals.
196 See Eustachius folding Schema generale between parts II and III of the Summa.
descartes and the last scholastics
keeping with his notion of order. For instance, he delayed the discussion
of motion (Aristotle, Physics III, ) until after book IV, going directly
from the discussion of causes (Book II) to infinity (Book III, ).
All of the various distinctions called analytic and synthetic are listed by
Rudolphus Goclenius in his Lexicon Philosophorum of . Method is
said to be an intellectual path from what is known to what is unknown,
which is further subdivided into demonstrative, from cause to effect
and analytic, from effect to cause.197 But Goclenius also divides method
differently. One of the divisions terminates with a distinction between
synthetica (componens ordo) and analytica (resolvens ordo); synthesis pro-
gressing from the first principles of things to secondary ones and anal-
ysis progressing from final notions to principles.198 Moreover, another
of the divisions, under the heading of syllogism and demonstration, ter-
minates with a distinction between synthetica and analytica, synthesis
being linked with propter quid and analysis with ab effectu and induc-
tione.199
197 That is, via intellectuali a notis ad ignota, which is further subdivided into demon-
strativa, a causa ad effectum and analytica, ab effecto ad causam. Goclenius , p. .
Compare with Eustachius definition of method and the triple order of resolution, com-
position, and definition:
There are two principal things to be considered in any science, namely the objects
of the inquiry and the means which are generally used to explain those objects.
And the objects of inquiry may be compared among themselves, or the means
among themselves, or finally the means with the objects of inquiry. Hence there is
a triple order to be observed in any science. First the many objects of inquiry must
be compared among themselves, and what are prior must be expounded earlier,
and what are posterior, and incapable of being understood without what has gone
before, should be explained later. Second, the means should be compared amongst
themselves; and when there are many means to prove a given result, those which
are closer to the thing to be proved should be dealt with in an earlier place, and
those which are more remote in a later place. Third and finally, the means must be
compared with the objects of inquiry; the order to be observed here designed to
ensure that the prior means correspond with the prior objects of inquiry, and the
posterior means with the objects which are posterior,
Eustachius , p. , trans. in ACS pp.
198 Goclenius , p. . One can find the same distinction in the discussion of ordo,
thon, see Freedman (). Freedman quotes Melanchthon as dividing method into
analytic and syntheticanalytic: posteriores to priores and inductio singularium et
chapter one
200 AT VII .
201 Descartes was attacked for the novelty of his opinions by the Academic Senate
of Utrecht in . Among the reasons given by these magistrates was that Descartes
philosophy is opposed to the traditional philosophy which universities throughout
the world have hitherto taught on the best advice, and it undermines its foundations.
Moreover, it turns away the young from this sound and traditional philosophy and
prevents them [from] reaching the heights of erudition; for once they have begun to
rely on the new philosophy and its supposed solutions, they are unable to understand
the technical terms which are commonly used in the books of traditional authors and in
the lectures and debates of their professors. The edict sums up the problem by saying
that various false and absurd opinions either follow from the new philosophy or can be
rashly deduced by the youngopinions which are in conflict with other disciplines and
faculties and above all with orthodox theology (AT VII, ).
202 AT VII, .
chapter one
203 AT VII, . See also AT VII, : Again, there is no need to fear that my opinions
will disturb the peace of the Schools. On the contrary, philosophers already take sides
against each other on so many controversies that they could hardly be more at war than
they are now. Descartes defense might have seemed ad hoc. He did not say how he
knew that all philosophers generally accepted his principles and why he thought that
his principles were the most ancient of all. But it can be shown that his reply was not
constructed just to satisfy the Magistrates of Utrecht. He had already attempted on several
occasions to avoid having his philosophy called novel. (See Descartes exchange with
Nol, above.) In the Dedicatory Letter to the Deans and Doctors of the Sorbonne, Descartes
had rejected the judgment that his method was novel:
And finally, I was strongly pressed to undertake this task by several people who
knew that I had developed a method for resolving certain difficulties in the sci-
encesnot a new method (for nothing is older than the truth), but one which they
had seen me use with some success in other areas; and I therefore thought it my
duty to make some attempt to apply it to the matter in hand (AT VII, )
204 AT VII, . Descartes continued to maintain such a defense, elements of which
made their way into one of his replies to the question of the novelty of the cogito. As he
wrote,
I am much obliged to you for informing me of the passages in Saint Augustine
that can help in authorizing my opinions. Some other friends of mine have already
done something similar. And I take great satisfaction in the fact that my thoughts
agree with those of so sainted and excellent a person. But I am not at all of the habit
of thought of those who desire that their opinions appear new. On the contrary, I
accommodate mine to those of others insofar as truth allows me to do so
(AT IV, )
descartes and the last scholastics
have nevertheless made use of no principle that has not been approved
by Aristotle and by all the other philosophers of every time. Descartes
asserts that he has considered only the figure, motion, and magnitude
of each body, and what must follow from their collisions according to
the laws of mechanics, as they are confirmed by certain and daily expe-
rience. He thus turns Aristotle into a fellow mechanist. Two articles
later, he reinforces this revisionist history through a comparison of his
principles and those of both Democritus and Aristotle: That the phi-
losophy of Democritus is not less different from ours than from the
vulgar.205 He both attenuates the contrast between his philosophy and
that of Aristotle, and accentuates his differences with atomists such as
Democritus, presumably in the hope of bringing his Aristotelian readers
into his camp. These issues are raised in the later French edition Pref-
ace to the Principles as well, though Descartes seems to have attempted
to have it both ways. Descartes says: The . . . reason that proves the
clarity of these principles is that they have been known from all time
and even received as true and indubitable by all men. However, he
adds,
But although all the truths I place in my Principles have been known from
all time and by everyone, nevertheless there has never yet been anyone, as
far as I know, who has recognized them as the principles of philosophy,
that is to say, as principles from which may be derived a knowledge of all
things that are in the world.206
After the publication of the Meditations, while he was writing the Prin-
ciples, Descartes became involved in philosophical controversies on a
larger scale. He quarreled with Voetius, rector of Utrecht University, and
judgment was pronounced against him by the Utrecht magistrates in
.207 Perhaps because of his greater problems with the Protestants
in the Netherlands, Descartes sought to make peace with the Jesuits.
There was a reconciliation between Descartes and Bourdin in .
Descartes visited Bourdin at the Collge Clermont, and Bourdin offered
to play the role of Mersenne in Paris, to distribute Descartes letters.
Descartes also visited La Flche itself, for the first time since he had left
it. From to his death in , the relations between Descartes and
the Jesuits remained outwardly cordial.208 However, in , a general
attempted to write a philosophy, I know that your Society alone, more than any other, can
make it succeed or fail.
209 Ordinatio pro Studiis Superioribus, in Pachtler , vol. , pp. .
210 The likely reason Descartes was put on the Index was, ironically, his attempt to
Descartes, as we have seen, was keenly aware of this aspect of his relations
with contemporaries and predecessors; in a letter to Beeckman, he wrote:
Consider first what are the things a person can learn from another; you
will find that they are languages, stories, experiences, and clear and distinct
demonstrations, such as those of the geometers, that bring conviction to
the mind. As for the opinions and maxims of the philosophers, merely
to repeat them is not to teach them . . . who teaches me, that is, who
teaches anyone who loves wisdom? No doubt it is the person who can first
persuade someone with his reasons, or at least by his authority.216
Descartes won some early battles by seeming to defy authority and lost
others when trying to identify himself with conventional authorities;
many years later, after his death, he finally won the war, perhaps by
persuading others with his reasons.
216 AT I, .
chapter two
Gilsons Index
Thomas views on the Eucharist (AT III, ). For more on these topics, see chapter .
6 AT VII, . There is a story that Descartes carried the Disputationes Metaphysicae
with him in his travels. The story is repeated by Heilbron (), p. , but it is unlikely
at best, and, as far as I know, there is no evidence for it in ATs eleven volumes. Heilbron
gives three references, but they basically cite one another and lead nowhere.
7 See chapter .
8 AT III, . For more details on the Coimbrans, Toletus, and Rubius, see chapter .
9 AT III, . It is unlikely that Descartes had read Eustachius Summa at la Flche.
very widely read Latin-language philosophy texts from the first half of the
seventeenth century, with Eustachius a Sancto Paulos Summa probably
taking first rank.10
published with the master edition of the works of Saint Thomas in Rome,
(at the behest of Pope Pius V)the edition that Descartes
probably consulted.
Dalbiez also discussed an issue that seemed tangential to the debate
between Thomists and Scotists about objective being, but was waged
within the Jesuit order itself, between two of its greatest metaphysicians,
Surez and Gabriel Vasquez. It concerned the distinction between the
formal and objective concept and the role of the latter in the definition of
truth. Durandus a Sancto Porciano13 had maintained that truth consists
in the conformity of the objective concept and the thing. Surez reported
and criticized this thesis:
The first proposition [of Durandus] is that truth does not reside in the
formal act or cognition of the intellect, but in the thing cognized as
objective in the intellect, so that the thing is in conformity with itself in
respect to the existent thing, and in this way he explains that truth is
the conformity of the intellect to the thing, that is, the conformity of the
objective concept of the enunciative intellect to the thing according to its
real being.14
As Dalbiez said, for most scholastics, the objective concept is the thing
itself, insofar as it is cognized, but for Durandus, the objective concept
seems to become a third reality (tertium quid) between the formal con-
cept and the thing. Surez rejected the thesis, Vasquez defended it, specif-
ically referring to Durandus.15 Dalbiez concluded that Descartes could
not have been completely unaware of the debate. Whether Descartes pro-
fessor of philosophy was a follower of Surez or Vasquez, he could not
have neglected the exposition of a controversy that divided the two most
noted doctors of the Society.16
The scholastic debate therefore revolved about whether the objective
concept collapses into the formal concept, that is, into an act of the
intellect, and objective being is thus a being of reason, or whether the
objective concept is a third reality between the formal concept and the
thing, and objective being is also something more than a being of reason.
It is noteworthy that this debate can also be found at the University of
Paris in the first few decades of the seventeenth century, for example, in
p. , slightly modified.
23 Eustachius , Metaphysica, Pars I, Tract. I, disp. , quaest. , pp. . Trans.
in ACS pp. .
24 For an analysis of the relation between the doctrines of seventeenth-century scho-
lastics (Eustachius, de Raconis and others) and Descartes on ideas, see chapter . See
also Leslie Armours discussion of Eustachius on (transcendental) truth consisting in the
conformity of things to Gods intellect (Armour ).
descartes and the scotists
play its role, the objective concept must be distinguished both from the
thing and from the formal concept and those distinctions must be other
than distinctions of reason. But formal and objective concepts are both in
the intellect; thus, they must be distinguished formally or modally. And
of course the formal distinction (or the third kind in addition to real and
rational distinctions) is a notorious Scotist doctrine25 accepted by both
Eustachius and de Raconis.26
As one can see, Dalbiezs critique of Gilson can be both extended (to
other writers) and generalized (to other topics). Not only did Gilson miss
the Scotism in the seventeenth century scholastic theory of ideasnot
only did he fail to notice that Scotism survives in Cajetans commentaries
on Thomas and in debates within the Jesuit order itselfbut, in addition,
he did not recognize that Scotist doctrines also survive in the teaching
of University of Paris professors such as Eustachius and de Raconis. In
fact, it can be shown that the philosophical climate in France from the
early s (with perhaps the major exception of Jesuit philosophy in the
first half of the seventeenth century)27 was predominantly Scotist and not
Thomist.
times the Averroist system was added. For example: d Amici , de Rada , Vincent
. See also Di Vona .
30 For example, Boccafuoco ; Sarnanus .
chapter two
picture of the essentials of Thomism (though again it is not likely that there are necessary
or sufficient conditions for being a Thomist). It is not important, for my purposes, that
this characterization should be agreed to universally; I just want to use the theses in
order to sort out the relevant issues. See the Appendix to this chapter for the full text of
the Theses.
36 Goudin was born in Limoges and died in Paris . He became a Dominican
in . He taught philosophy and theology at Limoges, Avignon, Brive, and Paris (the
latter from on). His philosophy textbook was reprinted numerous times in the th
and th centuries; there was a Latin edition and even a French translation of it in the
th century (Paris, ). The th century French translation indicates that the work
had considerable influence on century Neo-Thomism. See Narciso . I am indebted
to the Scholasticon entry on Goudin (www.ulb.ac.be/philo/scholasticon/nomenG.htm
goudin) for this last bibliographical reference.
descartes and the scotists
one in the seventeenth century might have thought was at stake in the
opposition between the two great systems (and perhaps also to show
some continuity between the seventeenth century views and what we or
Gilson might have thought as Thomism and Scotism).
The first six of the Churchs theses characterized Thomistic meta-
physics. All beings are composed of potential and actual principles,
except God, who is pure act, utterly simple, and unlimited. He alone exists
independently; other beings are composite and limited. Being is not
predicated univocally of God and creatures, and divine being is under-
stood by analogy. There is a real distinction between essence and exis-
tence and between substance and accidents.
We encounter here an important Thomist thesis, with many ramifi-
cations, that what we say about God is only by analogy to what we say
about creatures. The doctrine complements well Thomas anti-Platonist
views that we do not have direct access to Gods Ideas or eternal exem-
plars in this life (as the souls of the blessed do) and that we do not have
knowledge of Gods essence. This set of theses is also discussed in the first
three quaestiones of Goudins Metaphysica. In quaest. I, art. , Goudin
calls act and potency the two chief constitutive principles of being.37 He
then argues at length in quaest. II, art. , that being is not said of God
and creatures univocally, but analogically,38 and that being is not univo-
cal with respect to substance and accident.39 One of the objections han-
dled by Goudin in this article involves the knowledge of God and his
attributes; he affirms, in good Thomist fashion, that we have only limited
knowledge of God: the knowledge we have of God is certain, but it does
not penetrate perfectly to divine being nor to the manner this being is
suitable for God; what we know is not much better than negation, inso-
far as we recognize in God a manner of being much more sublime than
that of creatures40 Scotus is the target of all of these arguments: Let
us first say that almost all philosophers admit that there is no univoc-
ity between a being of reason and a real being, given that the former is
only fictive and assumed. The only difficulty is with respect to God and
creatures, substances and accidents. Scotus claims that being is univocal
among all of these.41 Scotus is also the target in Goudins third article,
about the distinction between essence and existence: The only question
is whether essence and existence are really distinct. Most philosophers
deny it; Saint Thomas affirms it wisely. Scotus holds that the distinc-
tion arises from the difference between the form and the nature of the
thing.42
As we have just discussed, implied in this set of theses is a theory of
distinctions in which there can be only two kinds of distinctions: real and
rational. Goudins discussion also continues in this manner: quaest. III,
art. , concerns various kinds of distinctions. Goudin pits Scotus view
that there is a formal distinction, operating before the operation of the
intellect, and holding according to the nature of the thing, against Saint
Thomas opinion, held universally that in such cases there is only one
and the same entity conceived diversely.43
The seventh Thomist thesis asserts that spiritual creatures are com-
posed of essence and existence and substance and accident, but not mat-
ter and form. This is a transitional thesis, mostly about angels, that was
also disputed, along with their individuation, manner of cognition, voli-
tion, and their ability to effect changes in creatures. Goudin discusses
some of these issues, but does not specifically contrast the Thomist posi-
tion against the Scotist one.44
Theses treat corporeal beings. They are composite, that is, consti-
tuted of matter and form, meaning potency and act, neither of which may
exist per seGoudin argues that what is changed cannot be absolutely
simple but must necessarily be composed of potency and act.45 Bodies are
extended in space and subject to quantification; quantified (or signate)
matter is the principle of individuation. Bodies can be in only one place
at a time. There are animate and vegetative souls, which are destroyed at
the dissolution of the composite entity.
It happens that all of these theses became the object of intense debate.
Goudin, of course, reflects these discussions. He argues that prime matter
is pure potency and thus has no existence of itself, against the view
that matter and form have each their own proper and partial existence.
He relates the latter to the Scotist thesis that existence is not to be
distinguished from essence in reality, something he claims to refute in his
Scotist opinion about the form of corporeity subsisting after death for
the Thomist view that in substantial corruption there is resolution to
matter deprived of all forms: when a person dies and the rational soul
departs, all human accidents perish at the same time and are replaced
by similar accidents.52 Goudin then details a debate between Scotists and
Thomists about how qualities are intensified, taking the Thomist side, as
usual.53 And he devotes a whole article against the Ockhamist view of
the plurality of forms and the Scotist view on the form of corporeity.54 On
the question about the object of the intellect, Goudin is fairly clear: in
his Physics he states: the object of the human intellect in its state of life
is the quiddity of material or sensible things and what can be deduced
out of them. That is the doctrine of Saint Thomas;55 however, in his
Metaphysics he further specifies: the material object of the intellect is
real being, created and uncreated, substance and accident, but the formal
object of the intellect is the common notion of being abstracted all from
matter.56
Finally, Thomist theses concern knowledge of God. Divine exis-
tence is neither intuited nor demonstrable a priori, but it is capable of
demonstration a posteriori. The simplicity of God entails the identity
between his essence and his existence. God is creator and first cause of
all things in the universe. Goudin comments on Thomas five a posteriori
demonstrations for the existence of God and defends them against var-
ious objections,57 including Scotus objection to the first argument that
the power that moves a thing can be located in what is moved.58
Clearly the Thomist claim that God is not demonstrable a priori is a
consequence of the opinion that Gods essence cannot be grasped in this
life. Platonists such as Augustine and Anselm held that the existence of
God could be demonstrated a priori.
There were other points of disagreement between Thomists and Sco-
tists, some of which played an important role in seventeenth century
debates (as already glimpsed in Goudins exposition), but they but no
longer figured as essential to Thomism as defined in . For exam-
ple, Thomist theory of place required the immobility of the universe
Thomas Scotus
. The proper object of the human *. The proper object of the human
intellect is the quiddity of intellect is being in general (ens
material being (quidditas rei in quantum est)64
materiali)63
. Only analogical predication holds *. The concept of being holds
between God and creatures65 univocally between God and
creatures66
. Man is a unity of single form (the *. Man is a composite of a plurality
rational soul)67 of forms (rational, sensitive, and
vegetative souls)68
. Prime matter is pure potency69 *. Prime matter can subsist
independently of form by Gods
omnipotence70
taria, IV, lectio . See also Goudin , Physica I, thesis III, quaest III, art. .
62 Scotus, Quaestiones Quodlibetales, quaest. XI.
63 Aquinas I, quaest. , art. .
64 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense I, dist. , quaest. .
65 Aquinas I, quaest. , art. .
66 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, II, dist. , quaest. .
67 Aquinas , I, quaest. , art. .
68 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, IV, dist. , quaest. .
69 Aquinas , I, quaest. , art. .
70 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, II, dist. , quaest. .
chapter two
Thomas Scotus
. The principle of individuation is *. The principle of individuation is a
signate matter (materia signata haecceity, or form72
quantitate)71
. The immobility of the universe as *. Space is radically relative: there is
a whole is the frame of reference no absolute frame of reference for
for motion73 motion74
. Without motion there would be *. Time is independent of motion76
no time75
71 Aquinas , chap. .
72 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, II, dist. , quaest. .
73 Aquinas , IV, lectio .
74 Duns Scotus , Quaestiones Quodlibetales, quaest. XII.
75 Aquinas , IV, lectio .
76 Scotus , Quaestiones Quodlibetales, quaest. XI.
77 Though also attempting to avoid the extreme Augustinianism of Henry of Ghent.
Philosophers differ on this matter. Some maintain that the object of meta-
physics is God, others that it is separate substances, others that it is sub-
stance in general, others that it is finite (or so called predicated) being. All
these definitions are too narrow, as will appear. Others extend its scope
too far, when they say that the object of metaphysics is being taken in the
broadest sense, to include both real entities and entities of reason; yet a
true and real science, especially the foremost and queen of all the sciences,
does not consider such tenuous entities in themselves, only accidentally. So
the standard view is far more plausible, namely that the complete object of
metaphysics in itself (for our question is not about its partial or incidental
object) is real being, complete and in itself, common to God and created
things.80
Without referring to any particular authority, Eustachius rejects the Tho-
mist position that the object of metaphysics is predicated being. Interest-
ingly, after rejecting another position as too daring, he accepts the Scotist
one, that the object of metaphysics is being, common to God and created
things, as the standard view. Eustachius also accepts the proposition that
Gods essence cannot be conceived except as existing:
Existence belongs to God and to created things, but with a difference. For
God exists not through existence being added to his nature, but through
his very essence (just as quantity is said to be extended through itself). But
this is not true of created things, since their existence is accidental to their
essence. Hence existence is essential to God, so that it is a contradiction
that he should not exist, but existence is not essential to created things,
which can either exist or not exist. Hence the divine nature cannot be
conceived except as actually existing; for if it were conceived as not actually
existing, there would be something missing in its perfection, which is quite
inconsistent with its actual infinity. But the formal or essential concept of
a created thing is distinct from its existence.81
And, consistently with the two previous passages, he argues that we can
form concepts of Gods essence in this life (proposition *):
By means of the natural light we can even in this life have imperfect
awareness of God, not merely of his existence but even of his essence. For
by the power of natural inference we can infer that God is an infinite being,
a substance that is uncreated, purest actuality, an absolutely primary cause,
supremely good, most high and incomprehensible. All these things belong
to God by his very essence, and indeed uniquely, since they cannot belong
to any other being. Hence when I grasp in my mind an infinite or uncreated
being, or some such, I fashion for myself a concept uniquely applicable to
be noted that Jesuits were specifically required to teach that there are not several souls in
man, intellective, sensitive and vegetative souls, and neither are there two kinds of souls
in animals, sensitive and vegetative souls, according Aristotle and the true philosophy,
see chapter . See also the discussion of what Emily Michael calls Latin pluralism in
Michael .
84 The situation, as usual, is more complicated. It might seem that early (perhaps
Iberian and Roman) Jesuits were Thomist-leaning, but later (perhaps French) Jesuits
were not. (See Ariew .) However, even this conclusion should be qualified. When
one reads the Disputationes Metaphysicae of the great Jesuit metaphysician Surez, one is
struck by the fact that in general he proceeded by considering issues in the light of his
predecessors, especially Thomas and Scotus, and sides with Scotus almost as often as he
sides with Thomas, though he also often takes a direction that is his alone. Of course, even
when he sides with Thomas or Scotus, he modifies their doctrines significantly. Surez
accepts analogical predication, with Thomas (disp. , sec. , no. ) but thinks that a
concept of being can be found which is strictly unitary (disp. , sec. , no. ) and, thus, he
sides with Scotus on this issue: the proper and adequate formal concept of being as such
is one. Surez adds that this is the common opinion; its defenders are Scotus and all his
descartes and the scotists
disciples (disp. , sec. , no. ). He accepts the Scotist doctrine of matter existing without
form by divine power (this leads him to being listed among the Scotists by the Doctrinaire
Jean Vincentdisp. , sec. , no. ) but he sides with Thomas on the plurality of forms
(disp. , sec , no. ). He argues, against both Thomas and Scotus, that the principle
of individuation is matter and form (disp. , sec. , nos. rejecting both Thomas
signate matter and Scotus haecceitasdisp. , sec. , no. ). Most importantly, he argues
against Thomas that there is a third distinction other than real and rational (disp. , sec.
, no. ). He disputes the Thomist doctrine of a real distinction between essence and
existence (calling it a distinction of reason with a basis in things) and between substance
and accidents (though he rejects the Scotist formal distinction as vague and substitutes
instead what he calls a modal distinctiondisp. , sec. , no. ). Surez, an important
early Iberian Jesuit, seems to have been as much a Scotist as a Thomist (or perhaps may
be better understood as neither Thomist nor Scotist).
85 Timaeus ad.
86 Physics, b.
87 Physics b.
chapter two
locomotion or growth must possess. Place per accidens is the place that
some things possess indirectly, through things conjoined with them, as
the soul and the heaven. Heaven is, in a way, in place, for all its parts are;
for on the orb, one part contains another.88
Aquinas accepted and modified slightly Aristotles account of the place
of the ultimate sphere; according to him, the parts of the ultimate sphere
are not actually in place, but the ultimate sphere is in a place acciden-
tally because of its parts, which are themselves potentially in place.89 He
also rejected Averroes popular solution to the same problem, that the
ultimate sphere is lodged because of its center, which is fixed.90 The tech-
nical vocabulary developed to interpret Aquinas view was a distinction
between material place and formal place (where, in Aquinas vocabulary,
formal place is the real ground or ratio of place). Place is then move-
able accidentally (as material place) and immovable per se (as formal
place, defined as the place of a body with respect to the universe as a
whole). Thus the ship is formally immobile (with respect to the universe
as a whole) when the waters flow around it. We can note that Averroes
view required the immobility of the earth and that Aquinas view did not,
though it did require the immobility of the universe as a whole. However,
the Thomist views were not universally accepted, in part because they
required the immobility of the universe. This view conflicted with part
of the condemnation of the complex proposition That God could
not move the heavens in a straight line, the reason being that he would
then leave a vacuum.
Scotus and Scotists considerably modified Aristotles and Aquinas
accounts. They rejected the distinction between material and formal
place, arguing instead that place is a relation of the containing body
with respect to the contained body. Place is then a relative attribute of
these bodies. (They also made use of the term ubi, sometimes referred to
as inner place, to denote the symmetric relation of the contained body
with respect to the containing body). Since the relation changes with
any change of either the contained body or the containing bodyhere
contained or containing bodiesthe place of a body does not remain
the same when the matter around it changes, even though the body in
question might remain immobile. When a body is in a variable medium,
91 Duns Scotus , Quaestiones in librum II Sententiarum, dist. II, quaest. VI. See
also Duhem , chap. .
92 Duns Scotus , Quaestiones Quodlibetales, quaest. XII.
93 Toletus , IV, quaest. V: An locus sit immobilis, fol. rr. Cf. Grant .
et peuvent estre dits se mouvoir de mouvement de lieu); see also vol. I, p. (chap. IX:
Que le lieu naturel est immobile).
95 Eustachius , Physica, tract. III, nd disp., quaest. , Quid sit locus, pp. .
96 Eustachius , Physica IV, tract. II, sec. , pp. .
chapter two
97 Eustachius , Physica, tract. III, nd disp., quaest. , Quotuplex sit locus, pp.
. For more on imaginary place, see Grant , chap. . There is a nice rejection of
the doctrine of imaginary space on pp. of Ceriziers Mtaphysique (Ceriziers ):
On ne peut traitter de l immensit de Dieu, sans toucher quelque chose: par ce mot
d imaginaires on entend un vuide infiny, qu on feint au dela des cieux, ou l on place
cet estre tout parfait, de peur qu il ne soit a l estroit des vastes et larges voutes de
l empyre. Ceux qui tiennent cette opinion s appuyent de l escriture et de la raison;
de l escriture qui assure que Dieu est plus haut que les cieux; de la raison qui ne peut
souffrir qu on limite une essence infinie. Qui ne voit que ce grand Vuide est un estre
d imagination, c est dire une chimere? Car ou ces espaces sont quelque chose,
ou elles ne sont rien; si elles sont quelque chose de reel, on a tort de les nommer
imaginaires; si elles ne sont rien, pourquoy on dit que Dieu est dans le rien? Mais
quoy? Sa puissance peut creer un monde hors de celuy-cy, il faut donc qu il soit
dans cet espace, que ce nouveau monde occuperoit: je l avoue, s il y a un espace;
mais s il n y en a point, il n y est pas: or il n y a point d autre espace que celuy que
nous y concevons possible: de sorte qu on ne peut pas dire plus proprement que
Dieu y est, que nous dirions qu il est en ces hommes qui naitront dans le siecle
venir.
Ceriziers opposition to any God-filled imaginary space is an interesting counterpoint to
his (ambiguous) acceptance of the relativity of motion in his Physics, p. : Le lieu est
donc la superficie du corps, qui nous entoure. D ou il suit contre l opinion du vulgaire,
que nous pouvons changer de place sans nous remuer; et mesme que nous la changeons
aussi souvent, que le vent agite l air ou l eau qui nous contient.
98 The distinction between external and internal place (or space) can also be found in
Toletus and the Coimbrans; but they do not use the distinction to resolve the two standard
problems about the mobility of place and the place of the universe. For more on internal
and external place, see Grant , chap. .
99 Physica. IV, tract. II, sec. , pp. .
100 In his article on the void, Eustachius further clarified his notion of imaginary space
above the heavens by asserting that it is not a vacuum, properly speaking; Eustachius
descartes and the scotists
it was held that no time elapsed when time and the world began, but that
an immense privation of timean imaginary timehad preceded the
creation.
As is often the case, it was Dupleix who stated the contrast most
sharply. He held that place is immobile in itself, while bodies change
places. He took it that Aquinas had a different opinion, interpreting
Aquinas doctrine of formal place as the view that one can imagine a
distance from each place to certain parts of the world, with respect to
which a given place, though changeable, may be said to be immobile.
Dupleix raged against this doctrine:
But since all this consists only in useless imaginations, I am surprised that
this opinion was received in several schools of philosophy; however, there
are so many weak though opinionated brains who follow so closely the
doctrine of certain persons that they would follow them right or wrong,
and forget the golden sentence of the Philosopher: I am a friend of Socrates,
a friend of Plato, but rather more a friend of truth. These are, I say, weak
minds who resemble certain soldiers who would give such devoted service
to a Lord that they would just as soon follow him to an unjust as to a just
war.101
, Physica, tract II, nd. disp., quaest , An motus in vacuo fieri possit, p. . See also
Leijenhorst .
101 Dupleix , pp. .
102 Dupleix , p. .
103 Gaultruche , vol. II, p. : notabis vero . contra Thomistas; Perinde esse,
an puncta illa distantiae sint realia, an solium fictitia et imaginaria. Nam saltem sunt
virtualiter realia, quatenus idem per ea praestari potest, quod per realia formaliter. Atque
hujusmodi quidem assignari possunt in iis spatiis, quae per imaginationem finguntur a
nobis existere supra caelos. Prob. Quia mundus universus potest divinitus moveri sursum,
aut deorsum motu recto; quo in casu mutaret locum; et consequenter mataret etiam
aliquas id genus distantias. Lawrence Brockliss thinks that Gaultruche is representative
chapter two
form, the debate about the concept of place was not completely settled by
the second half of the seventeenth century.104
In sum, while late scholastics agreed in rejecting the independence of
space from body, they disagreed about other important issues. Hidden
within the debate between Thomists and Scotists on the question of
the mobility/immobility of place and the place of the ultimate sphere
were questions about the relativity of motion or reference for motion.
Some thinkers supported a Thomist doctrine in which the motion of a
body is referred to its place, conceived as its relation to the universe as
a whole, a universe which is necessarily immobile; others supported a
Scotist doctrine in which the motion of an object is referred to its place,
conceived as a purely relational property of bodies.
In somewhat the same way as space, the concept of time involved ques-
tions about whether it is dependent or independent of bodies, whether it
is mind-dependent, and whether there is an absolute reference for it or
it is radically relative. One can find disagreement over such issues at the
start of the seventeenth century. Many Aristotelians thought time depen-
dent on bodies, but not mind-dependent. Others sided with Augustine,
thinking it independent of the motion of bodies.
For Aristotle, time is the number of motion, that is to say, time is
the enumeration of motion. There cannot be any time without there
being some change; we measure motion by time and time by motion.
Consequently, there are as many times as there are motions and all are
able to serve as the definition of time. However, the choice of a motion
of French Jesuits and argues that French Jesuits were not always strongly aligned with
Thomism (Brockliss, and ); he may be right. However, I think the evidence
supports a developmental thesis. The one French Jesuit author of a textbook before ,
Ceriziers, holds various Thomistic doctrines which Gaultruche will reject, including that
no matter can be without form (though with a modification): on ne doit pas pourtant
nier que Dieu ne puisse conserver la matire sans aucune forme, puis que ce sont deux
estres distinguez, qui ne dependent pas d avantage l un de l autre, que l accident de la
substance, qui se voit separ d elle dans l eucharistie (pp. ).
104 Although Scotists such as Frassen seem to have had the best of the argument
(Frassen , pp. ) and others such as Barbay and the Jesuit Vincent opted for the
middle ground (Barbay , pp. ; Vincent , vol. , pp. ), some
Thomists resolutely maintained their position (Goudin [], vol. , pp. ;
, vol. , pp. ).
descartes and the scotists
pp. . See also Marand , p. : Le temps imaginaire est celuy que nous
figurons auparavant la creation.
110 Dupleix , pp. .
chapter two
two kinds of time: internal is the duration of each thing or its permanence
in being, external is the measure of this duration.111
Descartes Scotism
cartes immediate sources and the question of his originality even more puzzling. In
his article, Normore acknowledges the difficulty of comparing Cartesian philosophy
to the philosophies of Aquinas and Surez; because of that difficulty, he proposes to
begin in the fourteenth century and work forward, rather than to work backward from
Descartes. While I agree with the sentiment expressed, I think that one can progress
from Descartes and his contemporaries to his potential sources, given that the fourteenth
century doctrines are still alive in seventeenth century scholasticism. I hope to have
identified some of the sources to be examined.
115 Obviously, every one of these propositions might require an extended defence.
116 See, for example, Vincent Carraud, Arnauld: From Ockhamism to Cartesianism, in
descartes and the scotists
Ariew and Grene , pp. . In his article, Carraud compares Arnaulds teaching
in with Descartes philosophy, especially as it concerns the object of metaphysics
and the univocity of being. At the Sorbonne, in , Arnauld taught both propositions
* and *, though he was forced to retract *.
117 See chapter .
118 This is a very complex issue; on the question of the relativity of motion, see Garber
Thomist, please see Carriero , especially the methodological remarks in the Preface,
pp. vix.
122 See Douarche .
123 J.-R. Armogathe, L approche lexique en histoire de la philosophie, p. in Fattori
.
descartes and the scotists
appendix
Twenty-Four Theses124
. Potency and act divide being in such a way that whatever exists is either pure
act or is necessarily composed of potency and act as its first and intrinsic
principles.
. Act, insofar as it is perfection, is not limited except by potency, which is the
capacity for perfection. Therefore, in whatever order act is pure, it exists as
unlimited and unique in that same order, but where it is finite and multiple,
it comes into true composition with potency.
. Thus, in the absolute ratio of existence itself, God alone subsists; he alone is
most simple. All other things that participate in existence have a nature by
which existence is constricted and are composed of essence and existence as
two really distinct principles.
. Being, which derives its name from existence, is not predicated univocally
of God and creaturesnor merely equivocallybut it is predicated analog-
ically, by an analogy of both attribution and proportionality.
. There is, moreover, in every creature a real composition of subsisting subject
with forms secondarily added, that is, accidents; indeed, this could not be
understood unless existence were received in an essence distinct from it.
. In addition to absolute accident there are accidents that are relative, or with
respect to another. However, with respect to another does not signify
secondarily something having its own ratio, but often has a cause in things
and therefore a real being distinct from the subject.
. The spiritual creature is altogether simple in its essence. But there remains
in it a dual composition: of essence with existence and of substance with
accidents.
. The corporeal creature, however, is in its own essence composed of potency
and act. Such potency and act are designated in the essential order by the
names matter and form.
. Neither of these parts has existence per se, nor is produced or destroyed per
se; nor placed in a category except reductively, as a substantial principle.
. Although extension into integral parts follows corporeal nature, it is not,
however, the same for body to be a substance as to be something quantified.
For substance of itself is indivisible, not certainly after the manner of a point,
but in the manner of what is outside the order of dimension. Quantity, which
makes substance extended, really differs from substance and is truly named
accident.
. Signate or quantified matter is the principle of individuation, that is, numer-
ical distinction (a distinction which is impossible among pure spirits) by
which individuals of the same species are distinct from one another.
What John Locke called the new way of ideas governed philosophy
for more than a century, years that were both fruitful and fateful in
the history of philosophy. So central were ideas to the philosophy of
this period that Arnauld and Nicole could write at the head of the first
chapter of their widely adopted Logic: Some words are so clear that they
cannot be explained by others, for none are more clear or more simple.
Idea is such a word. All that can be done to avoid mistakes in using
such a word is to indicate the incorrect interpretations of which it is
susceptible.1 Now the Port Royal Logic was more than a logic; it was
the first standard text of modern philosophical method. What was the
concept intended by this clear and simple word? And in particular,
we want to ask, what was the historical context in which this seemingly
perspicuous term took hold? In other words, where did the new way of
ideas come from?
Traditionally, the term in its authoritative modern sense is attributed
to Descartes. Thus, for example, L.J. Beck wrote of Descartes usage:
It is notorious that Descartes use of the word idea is peculiar to
himself in that previously the term was used to describe the Ideas of
Plato and had no current usage in the terminology of the Schools.2
And Descartes himself gives a similar impression, when he tells Hobbes:
I used the word idea because it was the standard philosophical term
used to refer to the forms of perception belonging to the divine mind,
even though we recognize that God does not possess any corporeal
imagination. And besides, there was not any more appropriate term at my
1 Arnauld , p. .
2 Beck , p. . Beck states that for once he [Descartes] also invents a new
technical terminology; he continues by asserting that the term itself and its usage was
taken up by Gassendi and spread into England with Locke. For more on idea in Locke
and British philosophy, see R. Hall, Idea in Lockes Works, and John W. Yolton, The
Term Idea in Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century British Philosophy, in M. Fattori and
M.L. Bianchi , pp. and .
chapter three
C est l idee de celluy Dieu de bien en terre, la venue duquel nous atten-
dons devotement.7 The Dictionnaire Robert lists the meaning of repre-
sentation as beginning in the seventeenth century.8 A similar use is given
in the Oxford English Dictionary as current from the late sixteenth cen-
tury.9 Dictionaries of earlier usage, on the other hand, such as F. Gode-
froys Dictionnaire de l Ancienne Langue Franaise et de tous ses dialectes
du IXe au XVe sicle, have no entry for ide whatsoever. By the end of
the seventeenth century, of course, the Cartesian conception itself has
entered into lexical accounts, as for example in Furetires Dictionnaire
Universel, where the second of five meanings includes an explicit refer-
ence to Descartes usage.10
It is, then, clearly in accordance with this new literary usage that
Descartes calls ideas in Meditation III as it were images of things. No
wonder Hobbes took him to be following the doctrine in which ideas
were identified with images. At the same time, of course, Descartes
statement to Hobbes also suggests his opposition to this equation; he
used the word that people employed to designate the concepts in Gods
mind, although God has no corporeal imagination. Our ideas, like Gods,
are concepts, mental acts or mental contents, but decidedly not images.
Other passages explicitly stress this difference, as against the Hobbesian
(or Gassendist) identification of idea and image. Thus, for example, in
July , Descartes writes to Mersenne: . . . by idea I do not just mean
the images depicted in the imagination; indeed, in so far as these images
and de Sales using ide as image. He also gives as second meaning Modle, type parfait,
idal.
8 Robert , III, p. .
9 Oxford English Dictionary, III, p. , col a. The OED also gives idea its meaning of
image from at least . Classical Latin dictionaries do not list idea at all, even though the
term can be found in Seneca. Smiths Smaller Latin-English Dictionary, a later-classical and
medieval-leaning dictionary, does list idea, but as Platonic idea or archetype, referring to
Senecas Epistles.
10 Furetire , II: Ide, se dit aussi des connaissances que l esprit acquiert par le
rapport & l assemblage de plusieurs choses qui ont pass par les sens. Descartes prouve
nettement la necessit de l existence de Dieu par l ide qu on se forme naturellement
d un Tout infiniement parfait, dont l existence est une de ses perfections. See also the
Dictionnaire de l Acadmie franaise, for the now standard different meanings of ide.
One also senses Descartes influence in the database of the INaLF, which is predominantly
post-Cartesian; see Grard Gorcy, Ide(s) dans le corpus textuel de l INaLF du dix-
septime sicle (), Descartes et Malebranche excepts, in M. Fattori and
M.L. Bianchi , pp. , especially the interesting pre-Cartesian occurrences
included on pp. , , , , and .
chapter three
are in the corporeal imagination, I do not use that term for them at
all.11 And there follows the statement already quoted: Instead, by the
term idea I mean in general everything which is in our mind when we
conceive something, no matter how we conceive it.12 Descartes has been
discussing the comments of an unknown correspondent about his use of
idea. He continues:
But I realize that he is not one of those who think they cannot conceive a
thing when they cannot imagine it, as if this were the only way we have of
thinking and conceiving. He clearly realized that this was not my opinion,
and he showed that it was not his either, since he said himself that God
cannot be conceived by the imagination. But if it is not by the imagination
that God is conceived, then either one conceives nothing when one speaks
of God (which would be a sign of terrible blindness) or one conceives him
in another manner; but whatever way we conceive him, we have the idea of
him. For we cannot express anything by our words, when we understand
what we are saying, without its being certain thereby that we have in us the
idea of the thing which is signified by our words.13
Thus Descartes appears to be drawing on the current literary usage, in
which ideas are not just exemplars in Gods mind, but actual psychologi-
cal events in our minds, while at the same time refusing the identification
of idea and image that the new literary sense suggests. So we must ask,
further, what sources did Descartes find in the philosophical literature
of his own time on which to ground his own usage? Where did the cur-
rent image-oriented use appear in the philosophical as against the liter-
ary works of the period, and on the other hand, how does the conceptual
(non-image) use Descartes was to devise relate to the philosophical use
of idea in general?
We will suggest answers to these questions by referring to a number
of early seventeenth-century philosophical writers. Not that Descartes
was directly influenced by one or more of them. Even though Descartes
read some of the writers at some time in his life, the more important
point is that they were well-known thinkers whose terminology would
have been familiar to any scholar of the time, whether to Descartes
himself or to those in his circle. The main examples we will discuss
are four in number, arranged chronologically, differing in their form of
exposition and in the professional status of their authors. Three out of
11 AT III, . CSMK, .
12 AT III, . CSMK, .
13 AT III, ; CSMK, . Cf. AT III, ; VIII, , ; VII, , , , , , .
ideas, before and after descartes
the four authors taught at the University of Paris during the first few
decades of the seventeenth century, namely, Eustachius a Sancto Paulo,
Jean Crassot, and Charles Franois d Abra de Raconis; the other was
Rudolph Goclenius, the author of a celebrated philosophical dictionary.14
All these authors will impart some clues to the revised meaning Descartes
will initiate.
But first, let us look at a thoroughly traditional text, which will indicate
the context or occasion for the discussion of ideas in the philosophical
corpus of seventeenth century scholasticism. The following passage, for
example, can be found in the Corps de Philosophie of Thophraste
Bouju:
To these four kinds of causes we have just spoken of, the Platonists add a
fifth, which they call exemplar or idea; for insofar as God is the universal
artisan of all things and only makes things wisely and perfectly, under-
standing what he makes and why he makes it, there must be ideas, intelli-
gible notions or forms, in his divine understanding, of the things he makes.
This exemplary form is also found in the understanding of men; for in this
way the natural agent has in himself the natural form by which he produces
his effect and renders it similar; similarly the agent who acts through the
understanding has in himself the intelligible form of what he wants to do,
trying as much as possible to make what he is making resemble it. Thus
the doctor tries to introduce health to his patient in accordance with the
idea he has of it, and the architect to construct a house materially similar
to the one in his thought.15
Bouju, sieur de Beaulieu, Kings almoner and counselor, is writing an
ordinary philosophy textbook in French (for those not comfortable or
not educated in the Latin of the schools). His account is entirely tra-
ditional.16 The context in which he discusses ideas is the standard one.
He has been enumerating the Aristotelian causes and adds a discussion
of exemplary causation. Ideas are routinely identified with exemplars,
that is, either Platonic ideas or ideas in Gods mind. And the question
exemplar causes as a Platonic fifth kind of cause to be added on to the four Aristotelian
causes dates back at least to Seneca, Epistle no. .
16 The seventeenth century scholastics Descartes is known to have read in his youth
are also fairly traditional. See, for example, the Conimbricences , lib. II, quaest. and
, and Toletus , lib. II, cap. , quaest. .
chapter three
of God, resolved the issue by asserting that exemplar causes are efficient causes: the
causality of an exemplar, which is added, is not a different kind of causality than efficient,
since there would then be five types of causes. And so the exemplar cause is some kind of
efficient cause, which acts through the intellect as distinct from acting through nature.
Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, book I, dist. II, quaest. & ; also Opus Oxoniense, book I,
dist. , quaest. unica.
18 Aquinas , I, quaest. , art. (Aquinas , p. ); See also Jordan
and R. Busa, S.J., Idea negli scritti di Tommaso d Aquino, in M. Fattori and M.L. Bianchi
, pp. . Interestingly, by the start of the seventeenth century, the ideas in Gods
mind include ideas of things that will never be produced: Mais Dieu estant infiny il y
a en soy des ides d une infinit de choses, lesquelles ne seront jamais ides pratiques,
parce qu il ne produira point des choses respondantes icelles, Dupleix , p. .
ideas, before and after descartes
state, knows all things in the eternal exemplars, since we know all things by participation
in the exemplars: For the intellectual light itself, which is in us, is nothing other than a
participated likeness of the uncreated light in which are contained the eternal exemplars,
, I, quaest. , art. (Aquinas , pp. ).
chapter three
Some have wanted to say that things are true insofar as they resemble and
are in conformity with the idea of their essence and nature which is in God.
To this I respond that there is no doubt that true things are in conformity
with ideas which are in the divine understanding; but it is not there that
we must refer the proofs of human knowledge according to the reasons
of philosophy, that is, to know whether something is true; otherwise, we
would never have any certainty, given that it is outside our power to know
these ideas during this life.22
Bouju gives us an instance of a standard approach to the nature of ideas
with no hint of a new, psychological sense. On the other hand, the four
authors we will now consider do suggest, in various ways, a revision of
the traditional meaning of the term.
The first instance of the psychological usage in the philosophical litera-
ture seems to occur in the first part of the Physics of Eustachius de Sancto
Paulo, Physics being the third part of his Summa Philosophica Quadri-
partita. Eustachius was educated at the University of Paris, receiving his
doctorate from the Sorbonne in . Like Bouju, he is also writing an
ordinary philosophy textbook, but one in Latin, instead of in the vernac-
ular. When Descartes needed a concise textbook in philosophy, in order
to review school philosophy and to compare it to his own, he made use
of Eustachius Summa, subsequently calling it the best book of that kind
ever written.23
As was customary, idea is taken by Eustachius to be synonymous with
exemplar, and exemplars are discussed under the topic of causation, cor-
responding to Aristotles analysis in Book II of his Physics. The ques-
tion is, whether exemplary causes constitute a fifth class in addition to
the canonical four. Eustachius answer is that in the case of natural cau-
sation exemplary cause may be taken to be a kind of efficient cause,
and in the case of an artificer it belongs (more obscurely!) to formal
cause. What concerns us here, however, is not this traditional question
(which we shall return to in any case in connection with our other exam-
ples), but the nature of idea as the equivalent of exemplar. Eustachius
writes:
What the Greeks call Idea the Latins call Exemplar, which is nothing else
but the explicit image or species of the thing to be made in the mind of the
artificer. Thus the idea or exemplar is in this case some image (phantasma)
22 Bouju , vol. I, p. (chap. XIII: Que la verit des choses ne nous est point
connue par leur rapport aux ides qui sont en l entendement de Dieu.)
23 AT III, ; CSMK, .
ideas, before and after descartes
24 Eustachius a Sancto Paulo , Physica, Pars III, disp. , quaest. III: Quid sit
noticing that the close relation Descartes will initiate between ideas and
truth does seem to find a precedent here.26
The entry for idea is long and complex, including a relatively detailed
historical section about Plato and Platonic commentators. Two main
entries are given, though not really about separate senses of the term:
. [Idea] signifies the species or form, or external reason (ratio) of the
thing (which is outside the thing). Aug. l. . qq. quaest. . And thus
distinct from the thing. Nor is it the form of the thing, but one of the four
causes. [Note the causal context, as with both Eustachius and Bouju.] Its
description is general or special. In general the idea is the form or exemplar
of the thing, which the maker is contemplating when he makes that which
he is aiming at in his mind. Seneca Ep. , as the painter has in mind the
exemplar of that image which he can or wishes to paint.27
At first reading this important passage may sound like the literary usage:
the idea would be the image in the painters mind (ideas are as it were
images of things). However, what the painter has in mind is the exemplar
of the image: that is, the species or formthe eidos (the Greek equivalent
of species, identified as such by Goclenius under that heading).28 And
the image here is of course the paintingnothing mental at all, but the
actual object that the painter can or wishes to produce, itself a copy of
the idea, its model. Thus the idea here, far from being the particular image
in the artists imagination, is its very contrary: the image is the product,
and the idea is the object to be imitated in that productive process.
More surprisingly, in Senecas accountwhich will be echoed, though
not referred to, in our next exampleit is the actual, real-life model that
is the idea on which the painter bases his image, in this case, his portrait.
Thus in Senecas account, the artist is painting Virgil, and Virgil himself,
the poet in the flesh, is the model = exemplar = idea. Thus Senecas
26 As it did, in a limited fashion, with Aquinas and Bouju. Eustachius view is discussed
by Armour in , sect. , pp. .
27 Goclenius , p. .
28 Peter Dear quotes an interesting passage from Fonseca, the main Coimbran and
Aristotelian commentator in his own right, about the indifference of translating idea as
forma or species; Fonseca remarks that truly, dialecticians are not so much hampered
by a religion of words, Institutiones, p. , as quoted in Dear , p. . Fonseca is
obviously a good source for discussions of such terms. In fact, there is a recent article
by Norman Wells (, pp. ), treating Descartes in the context of Fonseca and
Surez. In most respects, this article is complementary to ours, except insofar as Wells
claims that Descartes thinks of idea as a form, citing his reply to Arnauld (AT VII, ).
However, Wells evidence is not conclusive; in Replies IV, Descartes seems to be adopting
what he thinks would be Arnaulds vocabulary and drawing out its consequences, not
committing himself to ideas being some kind of form.
ideas, before and after descartes
referring to a painter who is the cause of the image displayed on the canvas (AT VII,
) and an architect who makes up an idea of a house in his mind (AT VII, ). This
does not elicit much of a response from Descartes; see AT VII, .
chapter three
33 Goclenius , p. .
34 Goclenius , p. .
35 Goclenius , p. .
ideas, before and after descartes
36 Goclenius , p. .
37 Goclenius , p. . There is, of course, a sizable literature on the objective and
formal being of ideas in Descartes and his predecessors, from Etienne Gilson and his
critics to the present. For references to this literature, see Marjorie Grene (); see also
chapter .
chapter three
38 Goclenius , p. .
39 A further distinction reminiscent of Descartes earlier work is that which follows
between simple and complex ideas.
40 Crassot , p. .
41 Crassot , p. .
42 Crassot , p. .
ideas, before and after descartes
This is, once more, the realistic idea stemming from Seneca: there it
was Virgil who was the model, and in this sense the idea the painter was
copying. It is natural, dianoetic: either efficacious, like a signet ring, or
inefficacious, like the countenance of the king43presumably because
the countenance doesnt produce anything.
It is eternal, like the exemplars of things in the divine mind, or perishable,
like the type of the house in the mind of the architect. It is similar in
species, like the shape of the kings countenance and the shape of the
marble countenance. Or similar only in proportion, like the countenance
of the king to the picture, the type of house to the house . . .
In addition: An exemplar is Platonic, or not: Platonic is either natural,
like the horse itself, or mathematical, like the triangle itself, or artifactual,
like the house itself, the shield itself, etc.44
The dianoetic exemplar is further specified: The dianoetic exemplar
is the form, which someone imitates . . . The dianoetic exemplar is strictly
an exemplar. But in the very strictest sense, it is that which is dianoetic
and objective.45 Here we have once more a possible source of Cartesian
objective reality, this time, as with Goclenius conceptus, specifically a dis-
tinction in type of concept. A dianoetic exemplar is either an objective
concept, like the kings countenance, or a formal concept, like the aware-
ness of the kings countenance in the mind of the painter, or the dianoetic
or intelligible species such as the image of the countenance of the king in
the memory of the painter. As with Goclenius, the image sense enters
here in the context of species, perhaps because the species, the form
without the matter, is what is taken up in perception and lingers as an
image in the mind.46
The exemplar is also real or intentional, internal or external. Oddly
enough, finally, the thing thought seems to be able to be the exemplar
of its future.47 There is also a reference to Gods making the thing itself
through his thought. In short, the pair God and the artificer, eternal
and perishable, creator and created, seems to be always invoked when
exemplars/ideas are spoken of. In Descartes case, however, as we have
already noticed, the artist seems to be dropped.
43 Crassot , p. .
44 Crassot , p. .
45 Crassot , pp. .
46 Compare with Hobbes, Leviathan, part I, chap. : imagination is nothing but
decaying sense.
47 Crassot , p. .
chapter three
Second proposition
The essential ratio of the idea or exemplar consists in the objective concept,
or in the thing which is its object (obiicitur) . . .
. . . the exemplar is properly said to be what the artificer contemplates
when he operates intentionally; and in fact the artificer operates by con-
templating the objective concept of the thing to be made: e.g. the painter
51 De Raconis , pp. .
52 De Raconis , p. .
53 De Raconis , p. .
54 De Raconis , p. .
chapter three
objective as well as its formal being. Finally, like our other writers, Abra
de Raconis discusses the relation of exemplar causality to the four causes,
and concludes that it is a kind of formal cause, but extrinsic. The exemplar
(or idea) is not the informing form intrinsic to the thing, but something
outside it. Decidedly, however, it is not a fifth cause.
Now this whole context is certainly not Cartesian. Although Descartes
will link the objective reality of ideas to his version of the causal principle,
it is a question, for him, of how ideas are caused, not of how they
operate as causes. He does not use the term exemplar, which suggests
the traditional Platonic context, where, as in the Timaeus, ideas are
models or archetypes for creation. He does use the term archetype once,
in the Third Meditation argument, when explaining that ideas, even if
caused by other ideas, must ultimately be caused by something non-
ideal, which is a copy of the archetype (instar archetypi) in which as
much formal reality is contained as there is objective reality in the idea.55
This does indeed echo the traditional theme: if ideas are ultimately
caused by things (Descartes causal principle), those things copy the
Ideas in the divine mind, which serve as models for them. But this is a
very puzzling passage.56 In general, however, Idea as model for creation,
whether divine or human, is left aside in the Cartesian texts. What is
retained is the notion of a mental act that is also (as we would say)
intentional. And this Cartesian leitmotif does seem to be anticipated in de
Raconis account. The formal act of the mind, the particular thought (as
it were, image), is of the object, though not necessarily of a real object,
out there. The object of thought becomes, not necessarily the thing
Virgil, Caesar, the kings countenancebut what my mind seizes on in
this thought (or image) as its object. Thus in discussing ideas, Abra
retains the traditional context of exemplary causality, while loosening
the link between the formal, intellectual act and its object in a way
reminiscent of the Cartesian position to come.
We have been looking at examples of the seventeenth century use of
the term idea, with a view to finding background sources for Descartes
new, or reformed, conception, the idea that, for Arnauld and Nicole
55 AT VII, . CSM II, translates the passage as which will be like an archetype
which contains formally and in fact all the reality or perfection which is present only
objectively or representatively in the idea.
56 In the passage Descartes seems to be alluding to the tradition about ideas as
exemplarsand even to ideas as imagesonly for the benefit of his audience, who would
be well-versed in the tradition. There is no reason to believe that these characteristics
would be features of Descartes ideas.
ideas, before and after descartes
57 As quoted in Marion , p. .
chapter three
canceled out the major context of the traditional doctrine of ideas: the
context of archetype or model, where the idea informs its imitations,
and gives them, or their images, such reality as they have. Tradition-
ally, ideas are identified with forms, species (or eide): they have power
through a certain agency; they are efficacious, unlike particular things,
which are relatively inert. It is Ideas that, primarily through Gods thought
(or creation), inform things and make them the things they are. Analo-
gously, though of course in a lesser degree, the artists mind produces a
copy of a reality, itself in turn informed by the divine patterns, the Ideas,
in Gods mind. But the artist is entirely ignored in Descartes rendering,
and even God as model follower occurs only in that one strange passage
in the first proof of God. Nor does Descartes ever speak of exemplars,
which, though synonymous with ideas, fail to carry the particular, psy-
chological connotation implicit in the newer usage.
Why, we may wonder, did Descartes borrow the term idea, but
remove it almost altogether from its traditional context, and therefore
its traditional import? Two reasons may be advanced, one epistemologi-
cal and one metaphysical. Epistemologically, he was using the notion of
Gods ideas, which of course are not corporeal, to turn the new psycho-
logical meaning away from imagination, to pure thought. His professed
goal in the Meditations was to lead the mind away from the senses.58
Cartesian ideas, aping Gods pure cogitations, are entertained by minds
qua minds, not by the embodied beings we now are. They are psycholog-
ical units such as mathematicians employ in thinking through problems:
thinking of thousand-sided figures as easily as of triangles and pentagons,
which they could, but need not, imagine. Ideas as concepts, whether for-
mal or objective or both in one, are the units by which Descartes (and
his heirs) can free pure minding from its childish and scholastic bonds
to sense (free it also from the foolish scholastic apparatus of judgments,
syllogisms and the like). Ideas, so isolated, thus perform an important
epistemological function.
Metaphysically, moreover, when abstracted from their usual embed-
ding in the Aristotelian tradition, they liberate the thinker from the whole
rigmarole of form/matter ontology. We have, or enact, ideas of ourselves
as thinking, of God as infinite power responsible for our very being
through his creation and concurrence, and we have clear and distinct
ideas also of matter as simply spread-outness. Thus, except in the case
58 See Gueroult .
ideas, before and after descartes
within the tradition of late Scholastic doctrines to which they are indebted; he argues that
Arnaulds theory more faithfully interprets that of Descartes and provides a foundation
for a direct realist theory of perception.
chapter three
64 Regis , pp. .
65 Duhamel , pp. .
66 Duhamel , p. .
chapter three
67 Duhamel , p. .
68 Duhamel , pp. . In this, he follows Huets argument, in Huet ,
pp. .
69 Duhamel , pp. .
70 Rgis , p. .
ideas, before and after descartes
genus and their differencetheir genus as their matter and their difference
as their form. In this respect the matter of ideas is the property they have to
modify the soul and their form is the virtue they have to represent objects.
Rgis has a similar view about the genus and difference of the objective
being of ideas; it also encompasses a genus and difference, the genus of
the objective being of ideas is to make known what is in common between
ideas and sensations, and its difference is the property of making known
things such as they are in themselves, whereas sensations makes them
known only such as they are in respect to us.71 Rgis simply treats the
disagreement between him and Duhamel as a terminological: Duhamel
was mistaken, taking the formal being of ideas for the formal reason of
ideas, which is something very different, according to the principles of
the Cartesians.72
Ultimately, Rgis contends that Duhamels Philosophers and Theolo-
gians can define their terms as they wish. They can understand by objec-
tive being of ideas the object itself, insofar as it is represented by the
ideas. Cartesians are also free to understand by this word the properties
ideas have of making their objects known. He even agrees that in the
Cartesian axiom that ideas resemble the things they make known, the
resemblance is unlike that of a painting to its object. Ideas may repre-
sent, but the word representation is equivocal when it is attributed to
ideas and paintings.73 Similarly, Rgis agrees that the exemplary cause
properly speaking is that to which the efficient cause intend to make its
effect resemble and that, in this respect, ideas do not have true exemplary
causes, because they do not at all resemble their objects.74 So Rgis, while
agreeing with Duhamel, restates his conclusion but with respect to exem-
plary cause, improperly and metaphorically speaking.
These exchanges among Huet, Duhamel, and Rgis stayed at the sur-
face and were generally unsuccessful in part because, as we have seen
before, the critics of Cartesianism pretended that scholastic doctrines
were less wide-ranging than they were in actuality and Cartesians freely
made use of established scholastic terms, adapting them to their own pur-
poses, without much restraint.
71 Rgis , pp. .
72 Rgis , p. .
73 Rgis , p. .
74 Rgis , p. .
chapter four
1 Dupleix , p. .
chapter four
the scholastics and the novatores was not so great, we find here also a
variety of compromises as well as some more radically anti-scholastic
views.2
Before Descartes
2 The thesis, then, is not that the seventeenth century brand of scholasticism directly
influenced Descartes formulation of his philosophy, but that, at least, it prepared the way
for the acceptance of Cartesianism (and for the eventual attempt at reconciliation). The
thesis could be taken as a more general version of the one Vincent Carraud proposes with
respect to Ockhamism and the reception of Cartesianism by Arnauld, in Arnauld: From
Ockhamism to Cartesianism, Ariew and Grene , pp. .
3 Aristotle, Physics I, b. In fact, privation is needed only for substantial
change, and so drops out of consideration for most of the Physics. It is commonly dropped
by Cartesians, even those who still pay obeisance of a sort to form-matter explanation;
see e.g. Rohault.
4 Aquinas , I, lectio .
5 Toletus , III, chap. , text. .
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
9 See, for example, Dupleix , book II, chap. ; Eustachius , III.., quaest.
. See also Sennert , book I, chap. . Sennert goes a step further than the usual
textbook writer. He accepts the standard account, that neither matter nor form are
generated, only the compound of matter and form, but when he comes to the scholastic
phrase that forms are drawn out of the aptitude or potentiality of matter, he says that
he hears the sound of the words, but that his mind hears nothing. Ultimately he accepts
Toletus rejection of the opinion that there was something of form in matter before its
introduction therein.
10 Support for this position comes from De Anima III, chap. , concerning the active
intellect.
11 Aquinas , I, quaest. , art. .
12 Aquinas , I, quaest. , art. .
13 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, II, dist. , quaest. . William of Ockham also holds
a similar doctrine.
14 Scotus , Opus Oxoniense, II, dist. , quaest. .
15 Toletus , quaest. XIII: An materia sit substantia, fol. verso.
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
pp. .
21 Abra de Raconis , Tractatus de Principiis, disp. , memb. , Utrum materia sit
22 Dupleix , p. .
23 [Saint Thomas] accorde bien que Dieu peut faire que l accident subsiste en la nature
hors de son sujet: comme mesme tous les vrays Chretiens croyent que tous les accidens
du pain sont au S. Sacrament de l Eucharistie sans le pain: et les accidens du vin sans le
vin: bien qu il semble y avoir beaucoup plus de repugnance en cecy qu a faire subsister la
matiere sans forme: d autant que la matiere n a pas besoin d aucun sujet ny de suppost,
estant elle mesme le sujet et le suppost de toutes autres choses naturelles: et que l accident
ne peut naturellement subsister sans sujet. Dupleix , pp. .
24 Dupleix , p. .
25 Dupleix , p. .
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
Dupleix then cites verses of Ovid about chaos and lack of order at
the creation and even suggests that Moses himself followed this natural
order, representing prime matter at the beginning as the principle of
all created things by the words darkness (tenebre), waters (eaux), abyss
(abysme), and void (vuide).26 But Dupleixs doctrine is clear: matter
can exist without form naturally and by supernatural action; we can
conceive it thus; but it simply does not so exist, given that it was created
simultaneously with form. Still, it could!
If we jumped forward to the second half of the seventeenth century, we
would find, even by then, that not all philosophers accepted the Carte-
sian position on these questions. Schoolmen were still disputing the same
issues as Toletus versus Eustachius or Dupleix. And not all textbook writ-
ers went as far as Dupleix. Some just accepted the reality of matter as a
miraclefor example, Ren de Ceriziers argued that there can be no form
without matter and no matter without form naturally, but added, how-
ever, one must not deny that God can conserve matter without any form,
since these are two beings that can be distinguished, that no more depend
upon one another than accident upon substance, the former being sepa-
rated from the latter in the Eucharist.27 This compromise solution seems
to have been unstable, so that by the Jesuit Pierre Gaultruche argued
against the Thomists (contra Thomistas) about prime matter.28 However,
not everyone gave up the Thomist doctrine of matter. Although Scotists
such as Claude Frassen seem to have had the best of the argument, and
Thomists and Jesuits such as Pierre Barbay and Jean Vincent needed to
opt for a middle ground, some Thomists resolutely maintained their posi-
tion.29 For example, the Dominican Antoine Goudin wrote:
it can be asked whether God by means of his omnipotence could create
matter without its having a form. Scotus asserts it, as do some authors
outside of Saint Thomas school; Saint Thomas and all the Thomists deny it
. . . It seems that matter cannot exist without form even by means of Gods
absolute power. That is what Saint Thomas states (III quodlib. art. ). God
himself cannot make it that something exist and not exist. He cannot make
something that implies a contradiction and, consequently, he cannot make
matter be without form.30
26 Dupleix , p. . One can find the same creation story of simultaneous matter
and form in Sennert , book I, chap. , and then again, book IX, chap. .
27 De Cerizier , chap. , pp. .
28 Gaultruche , vol. , Physica Universalis, p. .
29 Frassen , pp. ; Barbay , Physica, pp. ; Vincent , vol. ,
pp. .
30 Goudin [], vol. II, quaest. II, art. , p. ; , vol. , p. .
chapter four
31 Dupleix, , p. .
32 Dupleix , pp. .
33 Dupleix , p. .
34 Dupleix , p. . Cf. Leibniz on the principle of individuation.
35 Pour le regard du premier chef consider en gros et en general sur la matiere, il
semble la verit estre fond sur la doctrine du Philosophe, lequel establit quelquefois
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
are right. He agrees that quantity can be a mark of individuation for cor-
poreal substances, but he does not think that it reveals the proximate
and true formal cause of the individuality and unity of the essence of sin-
gular things,36 since quantity is always an accident and accidents do not
operate at the level of essences. He repeats this argument against the sec-
ond, anonymous opinion; and he dismisses the other groups of Thomists
with roughly similar arguments: that specific difference is universal and
cannot be both principle of individuation and principle of universality.37
Dupleixs preferred position is the Scotist opinion that in order to estab-
lish the individual essence of Socrates, Alexander, Scipion, and other sin-
gular persons, we must necessarily add for each one of them an individ-
ual and singular essential difference which is so proper and so peculiar to
each of them for themselves, that it makes each of them differ essentially
from all the others.38
There are similar doctrines in the Metaphysica of Eustachius a Sancto
Paulo and Abra de Raconis.39 Another doctrine in the same general direc-
tion is that of Franco Burgersdijk in his Institutionum metaphysicarum
(originally published in Leyden, ).40 Burgersdijk rejects both Scotus
and Thomas opinions (with Thomas as the worse one).41 His own doc-
trine is that composite substances have both material and formal princi-
ples of individuation. With humans, the individuality lies in the rational
soul, which is an immaterial form. And, of course, humans can also be
differentiated by their accidents.42
The Scotist position seems to be the majority position in the sev-
enteenth century. It entails that form is the principle of individuation.
This appreciably alters what one means by form; forms are no longer
individuationis, pp. .
41 Burgersdijk , pp. .
42 Burgersdijk , pp. .
chapter four
necessarily specific. Thus form is on its way to becoming just the way a
particular part of matter is differentiated: ultimately, structure or shape,
rather than the organizing principle that makes the thing the kind of
thing it is.43
So much for the changes in scholastic thought: generally speaking,
the strengthening of matter and the weakening of form. At the same
time, there were also significant anti-scholastic voices, the novatores, who
included a variety of physicians and alchemists. Among the former, one
can count Sebastian Basso and Daniel Sennert and, among the latter,
Etienne de Clave. However much Descartes may have sneered at them,
these innovators were in fact preparing the way for his revolution.
And, of these, Basso, it is established, is the one whose work Descartes
knew.44
In humanist fashion, Basso wants to recover the philosophy of the
ancients, previous to Aristotle, and in particular atomism. For him, the
ultimate constituents of bodies are the minimal particles of matter or
atoms. Each atom is homogeneous, a simple body possessing a particu-
lar nature that persists in mixtures;45 when atoms enter into composition,
they make up natural minima having their own proper natures.46 Accord-
ing to Basso, there are four kinds of elementary atoms (other than the
ether), coinciding with the four traditional elements. But Basso contests
the scholastic doctrine that the four elements can assume new substantial
forms and thus can be generated from one another.47 Indeed, for Basso, all
changegeneration and corruption, alteration in quality, and augmen-
tation and diminution in quantityis explicable at the level of the ulti-
mate constituents of matter. Generation and augmentation in quantity
are the gathering together of atoms or clusters of atoms. Corruption and
diminution in quantity are the dispersing of atoms that were previously
united. Alterations in quality result from atoms of one kind being substi-
tuted for atoms of another.48 Thus, for Basso, completely new generation
is an illusion; what happens instead is the continuous reorganization of
43 For a similar movement in the conception of idea, from ideas as Forms to ideas as
chapter .
45 Basso , p. ; see also the resum, p. .
46 Basso , p. .
47 Basso , p. et seq.
48 Basso , p. .
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
49 Basso , pp. .
50 Basso , pp. , .
51 Basso , pp. , .
52 See Descartes to Mersenne, October , AT I, p. .
53 We should note that Bassos atomism and anti-Aristotelianism make him a heretic
for some early seventeenth-century thinkers (and not only for the most conservative
ones). Discussing Gorlee, Charpentier, Basso, Hill, Campanella, Brun, Vanini, et quel-
ques autres, Mersenne complains of their impertinence and denounces atomism, that
is, the doctrine qu il y a des atomes dedans les corps, qui ont quantit et figure; according
to him, en bout du conte ils sont tous Heretiques, c est pourquoy il ne faut pas s estonner
s ils s accordent comme larrons en foire. Mersenne , pp. . See chapter .
54 Hill , pp. , aph. .
chapter four
55 Hill , p. , aph. .
56 Galileo , vol. , p. .
57 Galileo , vol. , p. .
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
61 Formae item omnes substantiales (excepta rationali) non minus absurde defen-
duntur ab Aristotelicis quam materia, cum per eas intelligant substantias quasdam in-
completas, unum per se cum materia substantiale compositum constituentes; materia
enim e naturali composito sublata, et formas saltem materiali tolli necesse est. CENSURA:
Haec propositio est temereria, erronea, et haeresi proxima, Launoy , pp.
. This prohibition was renewed in and became the basis for condemnations of
Cartesianism; see chapter .
62 Mersenne , pp. .
63 The anti-Aristotelianism seems to derive from an alchemical and atomistic bent.
65 Garber .
66 Frey , chap. .
67 De Clave , chap. Du nombre des elemens Peripatetiques.
68 De Clave , chap. , Des qualitez elementaires.
69 Mais dautant que les proprietez sont plus intrinseques, comme estant dependentes
Descartes
If, on various fronts, the way had been prepared for his new program, that
is not to deny that Descartes himself made, and encouraged in others,
a radical break with the hylomorphic tradition. In his mature work, he
unequivocally elevates matter to the rank of substance and emphatically
eliminates the various kinds of soul that used to mediate between mere
matter and separable mind. There is finite extended substance (which
can stretch indefinitely, but is not infinite) and finite thinking substance
and God, or infinite spiritual substance, and that is that. Form-matter
thinking, even the problem of form and its origin, which people like
Pemble or the Boots worried at, seems to have faded from view. In
the Meditations, his major argument on first philosophy, he simply
does without a form-matter perspective altogether. There is, of course,
the one case of our minds informing our bodies during our sojourn
in this vale of tears: this is even, temporarily, a substantial form, like
those the scholastics had foolishly attached to other bodies. For them,
mind had been the only entity separable from matter; for Descartes it
is the only substance that does, in our case, function as the form of
another substance, the human body, or, if you like, as the substance
informing another substance to constitute a complex substance.72 Over
against his insistence on this one, exceptional substantial form, Descartes
does indeed attack the notion of substantial form directly on a number
of occasions, while in the Meteors he remarked that, although he had
nothing against the concept, he just didnt need it.73
veux rien du tout nier de ce qu ils imaginent dans les cors de plus que je n ay dit, comme
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
leurs formes substantielles, leurs qualits reelles, et choses semblables, mais il me semble
que mes raisons devront estre d autant plus approuves, que je les feray dependre de
moins de choses. AT VI, .
74 AT III, ; CSM, III, (with revision).
75 For such passages, see Grene , esp. pp. .
76 True, in this case we are speaking of a term, form, not of an opinion, but it
was a term that was centrally used in conveying the old opinions and would have been
comfortingly familiar to Descartes readers.
77 Descartes, Olympica, AT X, ; CSM I, .
chapter four
the notion of a motus ad formam, along with other scholastic conceptions of other than
local motions; AT X, , CSM I, .
79 Descartes, Le Monde, AT X, ; CSM I, .
80 Descartes, Le Monde, AT X, , CSM I, ; AT X, , CSM I, ; AT X, , CSM I,
Where else does Descartes use the concept form? There is a surprising
passage in Part One of the Discourse, where he is insisting that reason
and sense are equally present in all men. Here, he says, I follow
the common opinion of the philosophers, who say there are differences
of degree only between the accidents, and not between the forms (or
natures) of individuals of the same species.82 This is following his advice
to Regius with a vengeance, using the terminology of his teachers to
introduce an argument that will lead in a direction diametrically opposed
to theirs.
So far as we have discovered, however, a positive use of form occurs
again only in the Principles, when Descartes has shaken his own onto-
logical terminology into shape. Here, again, it is by no means a central
concept, but occurs in two passages, in both of which it has the mean-
ing of figure or size that it had already acquired, to a large extent at least,
in Le Monde.83 Principles II, tells us: All the variety in matter, all the
diversity of its forms, depends on motion. And the explanatory paragraph
shows us in a nutshell how satisfactorily Descartes has come to terms
with scholastic form-matter talk:
The matter existing in the entire universe is thus one and the same, and it
is always recognized as matter simply in virtue of its being extended. All
the properties which we clearly perceive in it are reducible to its divisibility
and consequent mobility in respect of its parts, and its resulting capacity
to be affected in all the ways in which we perceive as being derivable from
the movement of the parts. If the division into parts occurs simply in our
thought, there is no resulting change; any variation in matter or diversity
in its many forms depends on motion. This seems to have been widely
recognized by the philosophers, since they have stated that nature is the
principle of motion and rest. And what they meant by nature in this
context is what causes all corporeal things to take on the characteristics
of which we are aware in experience.84
A brief reference to forms in the text of Principles II, , though
incidental to Descartes argument there, is perhaps equally revealing. By
the operation of [the laws of nature] . . . Descartes tells us, matter must
successively assume all the forms of which it is capable.85 As Vincent
Cartesians
89 Bossu , pp. .
90 See Grene , pp. .
chapter four
patibility of the Cartesian doctrine of matter and form with the creation story. God
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
created matter in an instant and subsequently informed it: Nous supposerons donc
que la Matiere a est cre en in instant, mais que l ornement, c est dire, que la dis-
position, l ordre et l arrangement de divers corps qui se sont formez par l application
successive de ses parties les unes les autres, s est fait successivement en la maniere que
nous allons dcrire, ou en quelque autre maniere quivalente. Rgis , pp.
(unnumbered).
97 Le Grand , title page. For more information about Le Grand, see R.A. Watson,
100 Le Grand , p. .
101 Gassendi, , vol. , p. .
102 Gassendi, , vol. , p. .
the cartesian destiny of form and matter
the human soul, Gassendi believed that his atoms require no immaterial
principle to describe secondary causes, and attacked Aristotle and his
interpreters on the grounds that matter-form talk contributed nothing to
the understanding. For even though they usually say that form is drawn
from matter, still they are saying something that escapes our grasp, as
long as they want form to be a real entity distinct from matter; and yet
they do not admit that even the slightest particle of matter goes into its
makeup.103
The differences between the philosophies of Descartes and Gassendi
were fundamental. Still, to some critics, Descartes matter theory looked
very much like atomism. As early as , responding to the publication
of the Discourse on Method, Libertus Fromondus sent Descartes a work
against Epicureans and atomists he had written earlier (Labrynthius, sive
De compositione continui) and provided him with a series of objections
against what he saw as his overreliance on atomistic and mechanical prin-
ciples. Concerning Descartes account of body in the Meteors, Fromon-
dus commented: This composition of bodies made up of parts with dif-
ferent shapes . . . by which they cohere among themselves as if by little
hooks, seems excessively crass and mechanical.104
The Dominican Antoine Goudin spent almost pages of his Philoso-
phia arguing against Cartesian principles.105 He disputed, for example,
Descartes conservation of quantity of motion based on Gods immutabil-
ity. According to Goudin, God can, without inconsistency, augment,
diminish, or vary the motions he has given bodies. He also argued against
Descartes molecules as first principle: the principle of things must be
something substantial; they must vary according to the variety of things.
Extension is not something substantial; neither is shape and motion.
Attributes such as these do not really vary from thing to thing; thus exten-
sion, shape, and motion cannot be the principle of things. For Goudin
the core of his argument was that molecules of Descartes can no more
explain the variety animals with sensation and life than can atoms. In fact,
though he knew fully well and cited the Principia passages against Dem-
ocritus, Goudin began his discussion of Descartes principles by refer-
ring his reader to his previous criticism on the principles of the atom-
ists; as he said, Since the principles of Descartes do not differ from
those of the atomists in their principal points, they are refuted by the
reasons we have just given.106
In his prior disputation against the atomists,107 Goudin argued that
there are no atoms, and even if atoms are accepted per impossibile, they
cannot provide any foundation as first principle. His line of reasoning
was that, however small a body, it is always divisible; thus, there are
no indivisible bodies, that is, no atoms. He considered the reply that
atoms are so small that nature cannot abide a smaller bodythey are
divisible mathematically, or only by an operation of the mind, but that
they are indivisible naturally and in reality. Goudin replied that atoms
are different from one anotherthey have different shapes from one
another, one longer, one larger. Nature therefore allows things smaller
than some atoms. He asked rhetorically: what would prevent the branch
or hook of an atom to be broken into two atoms, since there are such
smaller proportions in nature? So there are no atoms; but even if there
were atoms, Goudin asserted, they cannot be the principle of all things
because they are not sufficient in themselves to explain the generation
of sensitive and animate life out of their combinations alonewitness
the exception made for humans and the insuperable difficulties with
accounts of animals as machines without sensation. Ultimately, atoms
and their combination cannot explain differences in kind. Finally, they
cannot be reconciled with the mysteries of the faith.
The story we have been sketching, in broad outlines, starts with indi-
viduation shifting from matter to form; hence, when Descartes recon-
ceived or eliminated form, individuation loomed as a problem. Descartes
principle of individuation, that is, the one announced in the Principles
of Philosophy, that all the variety in matter, or all the diversity of its
forms, depends on motion,108 seemed clearly insufficient to critics of
every kind. Descartes did have one form at his disposal, the rational soul,
and in two letters to the Jesuit Denis Mesland on the Eucharist, he devel-
oped a two-tiered principle of individuation, one for animate and inani-
mate bodies and another for human bodies informed by a soul.109 How-
ever, the Cartesians found Descartes explanations in the Letters to Mes-
land so theologically sensitive that they did not disseminate them widely.
Claude Clerselier did not publish these letters in his three-volume edition
110 They were first published in , and then, in a better edition, in Bouillier .
111 Cordemoy .
chapter four
or atom, a square one equal to the other two. I ask, in what respect do
these two extended things differ? Certainly no difference can be conceived
in them as they are now, unless we suppose something in bodies besides
extension; rather they are distinguished solely by memory of their former
condition and there is nothing of this kind in bodies.112
This Leibnizian doctrine has its roots in an essay from entitled Me-
ditatio de Principio Individui. There Leibniz also considers two rectangles
or two triangles coming to constitute two indistinguishable squares,
as an example of different causes producing an effect that is perfectly
the same. Of his two squares Leibniz asserts neither of these can be
distinguished from one another in any other way, not even by the wisest
being. Based on the principle that the effect involves its cause in such
a way that whoever understands some effect perfectly will also arrive
at the knowledge of its cause, Leibniz argues that if we admit that
two different things always differ in themselves in some respect as well,
it follows that there is present in any matter something which retains
the effect of what precedes it, namely a mind. Thus, for matter to be
individuated, it has to be connected to a mind that will retain the memory
or traces of its construction. Leibniz concludes: This argument is very
fine and proves that . . . we cannot think of anything by which matter
differs, except by mind. . . . This principle is of great importance.113 Of
course, the mind Leibniz is referring to could be either inside or outside
the thing, a universal soul or a mind, individual soul, substantial form,
or individuating form, that is, a haecceity. Leibniz chooses to locate the
principle of individuation inside the thing and thus derives something
like the identity of indiscernibles: unless we admit that it is impossible
that there should be two things which are perfectly similar, it will follow
that the principle of individuation is outside the thing, in its cause.114
You can see Leibniz making use of his principle of individuation in the
Discourse on Metaphysics. Leibniz claims that God chooses the per-
fect world, one made up of individuals with actions and passions, since
actions and passions properly belong to individual substances ( ). What
God creates are subjects, that is, individuals, like Alexander, whose indi-
vidual notion or haecceity, God sees. And what God sees in this indi-
vidual notion or haecceity is the basis and reason for all the predicates
that can be said truly of him, for example, that he vanquished Darius
and Porus; so we can say that from all time in Alexanders soul there
are vestiges of everything that has happened to him and marks of every-
thing that will happen to him and even traces of everything that hap-
pens in the universe ( ). Among the propositions to which Leibniz is
committed is the claim that no two substances can resemble each other
completely and differ only in numbersolo numero. In an earlier draft
Leibniz had added: that if bodies are substances, it is not possible that
their nature consists only in size, shape, and motion, but that something
else is needed.115 Now, all of this is aimed squarely at Descartes theory
of matter and its consequent principle of individuation. And, according
to Leibniz, the inadequacies of Descartes theory of matter could not be
resolved by atomist moves.
Leibnizs return to a more robust notion of form, or simple unity,
seems to solve a problem inherent in Descartes mechanism. If a body is
infinitely divisible, and nothing beyond size, shape or motion of a body
could be used to describe it, there would be no ultimate way to make it, or
its parts, the thing it is. Leibniz assumes that a simple (substantial) unity,
in essence a form, could be used to solve the problem. If a body is to be
real, at some point it must contain something that unifies it as such. This
formal atom would be a something like the rational soul of a human. As
he says about ten years later,
Hence, it was necessary to restore, and, as it were, to rehabilitate the
substantial forms which are in such disrepute today, but in a way that would
render them intelligible, and separate the use one should make of them
from the abuse that has been made of them. I found then that their nature
consists in force, and that from this there follows something analogous to
sensation and appetite, so that we must conceive of them on the model of
the notion we have of souls.116
This brings the circle back to infinitely divisible matter with forms fulfill-
ing the function of individuation.
Cordemoys atomism was an attempt to answer this problem within
a broadly Cartesian framework. Leibniz demolished Cartesian atomism,
re-establishing scholastic substantial forms and individuating notions or
haecceties. Thus a haecceity, an individuating form, comes to be proposed
as the element needed to individuate bodies, something that was missing
from the official Cartesian matter theory.
117 But see also Des Chene for scholastic precedents for that move.
118 Scholasticsand members of religious orders, in this case, Jesuits and Minims
such as Fabri and Maignan discarded substantial forms: Honor Fabri () and Ema-
nuel Maignan ().
chapter five
1 Garber , p. .
2 Westfall, , pp. . Westfall argues (from a Newtonian perspective) that
the conjunction of mechanism and corpuscularianism was detrimental to the scientific
revolution, which needed to detach corpuscularian matter theory from mechanical or
mathematical theory of motion (chap. ).
chapter five
3 Shapin , p. .
4 Laudan , A Revisionist Note on the Methodological Significance of Galilean
Mechanics, p. .
5 Of course, the Principles has to be put into context as a teaching text, a work
which Descartes hopes might be used in the schools; for that reason, Descartes is surely
minimizing the differences between himself and Aristotle and maximizing the differences
between himself and Democritus in the Principles. See Ariew .
descartes, basso, and toletus
particles; thus, he gives four other reasons for the rejection of Dem-
ocritean atomism: (i) Democritus supposed his corpuscles to be indivis-
ible; (ii) he imagined a vacuum around the corpuscles; (iii) he attributed
gravity to these corpuscles; (iv) either he did not show how things arose
only from the interaction of corpuscles or his explanations were not
entirely consistent. Descartes affirms the first three reasons as valid: he
himself rejects the indivisibility of corpuscles, demonstrates the impos-
sibility of vacuum, and argues that there is no such thing as gravity in
any body taken on its own. He then leaves to others the question of the
fertility and consistency of his results. He ends the article with the pro-
nouncement that he rejects all of Democritus suppositions, with this
one exception [of the consideration of shapes, sizes and motions], and
that he also rejects practically all the suppositions of the other philoso-
phers. Thus, it is clear to Descartes that his method of philosophizing
has no more affinity with the Democritean method than with any of the
others. Again, the only relation that holds between his philosophy and
Democritus, according to Descartes, is the consideration of shapes, sizes
and motions. But Descartes also asserts that he shares this considera-
tion with Aristotle and all other philosophers: as for the consideration
of shapes, sizes and motions, this is something that has been adopted
not only by Democritus but also by Aristotle and all the other philoso-
phers. Thus, according to Descartes, the important differences are then
the actual principles he useshis suppositionsnot any basic episte-
mological differences dealing with mechanism as opposed to natural-
ism.
The sharp separation between the scholastic and mechanical or cor-
puscularian philosophy can be challenged on other grounds. The second
half of the seventeenth century also saw the rise of Peripatetic atom-
ism, which, according to the general consensus, is an oxymoron. But
that is the title of a philosophy text by Casimir of Toulouse;6 it is also the
6 Casimir de Toulouse was a Capuchin monk (born circa and died in ). His
main philosophical work, the six volume textbook Atomi peripateticae (), was an
attempt to combine atomist and Aristotelian perspectives. Casimir allied himself with
Gassendi, rejected substantial forms, and insisted that the building blocks of natural
bodies were atoms, differentiated by their size, shape and motion. He argued for vaculoae,
or gaps, surrounding atoms at all levels of matter, including subtle matter. He even
proposed that animals could be explained in terms of the shape and motion of atoms. His
work created some controversy within the Catholic Church and, by , its volumes
were placed on the Index with the notation that they should be corrected: donec
corrigantur.
chapter five
attitude adopted by the Jesuit Honor Fabri and others who introduce
corpuscularian principles and explanations into scholastic philosophy.7
Instead of demarcating between the scholastics and the moderns, it
would better to take Descartes lead and to investigate intellectual rela-
tions holding between various philosophers. It might turn out that we
would affirm Descartes judgment that his philosophy differs as much
from atomism as it does from scholasticism; or better, turning the judg-
ment around, we might discover that Descartes philosophy has as much
or more in common with scholasticism than it does with atomism. Thus,
I propose to look at the contrasts Descartes draws between his philoso-
phy and that of the early atomist, Sebastian Basso, one of the most influ-
ential authors among the early corpuscularians,8 and the one he might
have drawn with those of contemporary scholastics such as Franciscus
Toletus.
7 See Blum . See also Thorndyke , vol. VII, chap. , for a discussion
of Etienne Natalis, another Aristotelian corpuscularian, and Fabri.
8 Meinel , p. .
9 Basso []. For more details about Bassos life and times, see Lthy .
10 Also Isaac Beeckman, Joannes Magnenus, the Boates, and others. Frey , chap.
, is entitled Villonii theses et cum ipso Clavius, Garassus, et Bassonis, cribantur. Frey
does discuss Garasse, Villon and de Claves, and in previous chapters he discussed Ramus,
Campanella, Gassendi, Telesio, Patrizi, Bacon, and others as failed critics of Aristotle but,
unfortunately, he forgets to say anything about Basso.
11 Mersenne , pp. . We should note that Bruno and Vavini were burned at
the stake and that Campanella was imprisoned for more than two decade by the Catholic
Church; we should also note that the atheists and rogues were not all atomists.
descartes, basso, and toletus
13 To Beeckman, October , AT I, .
14 AT I, p. .
15 AT I, p. .
16 Mersenne , vol. , pp. , ; cf. the appendix of the nd revised
edition, AT I, p. .
17 AT I, pp. .
descartes, basso, and toletus
but disagreed about the ether. Then, a year later, we have the identification
with the novatores in the context of an ill-tempered letter to Beeckman
concerning what anyone can teach another. Basso does not have anything
to teach Descartes, any more than anyone else (unless he can convince
him by his reasons). Finally we have the disavowal of Basso: he is good
only for destroying Aristotles opinion, Descartes denying that he shares
this intent, claiming that he seeks only to establish something so simple
and evident that everybody would agree with it. However, in order to
answer the question fully, we need to recall the doctrines of Descartes
and Basso on the subject of rarefaction and the ether; this requires us
to discuss also their views on corpuscles and the void. But above all,
we need to compare these doctrines with those of the Aristotle of the
scholastics at the start of the seventeenth century, Aristotelians such
as Eustachius a Sancto Paulo, Scipion Dupleix, and perhaps the early
Daniel Sennert,18 but especially Toletus and the Conimbricences, authors
constantly cited by Basso, and whom Descartes remembers reading in his
youth.19
For a late (or post-Renaissance) scholastic, there are two kinds of muta-
tion, substantial (or generation and corruption) and accidental (or mo-
tion). Generation and corruption are changes in the substance of a thing:
the substance acquiring or losing a substantial form. Substantial forms
are said to be indivisible, not capable of more or less, and not possessing
contraries, and thus they cannot be acquired successively and piecemeal.
Motion, in contrast, occurs successively between contraries; motion must
pass from one contrary as the term from which (a quo) to the other con-
trary as the term to which (ad quem). According to its Aristotelian defi-
nition, the actualizing of what is in potentiality insofar as it is in poten-
tiality,20 motion is an imperfect actuality, the actuality of a being whose
potentiality is being actualized while it still remains in potency for further
de Raconis .
19 Toletus . Conimbricenses . For more complete bibliographic information
on these and other such commentaries, see Lohr . For the reference in Descartes
correspondence to his remembering Toletus and the Coimbrans, see To Mersenne, Sep-
tember , AT III, .
20 For example, Dupleix , III, chap. , p. .
chapter five
21 Toletus , III, chap. , text. : esse in actu est participare aliquam formam . . .
Esse actum est esse aliquam formam accidentalem vel substantialem, successivam, aut
permantentes . . . Esse autem potentiam, est esse principium agendi, aut patiendi aliquid.
22 Toletus , III, chap. , quaest. .
23 See also Dupleix , III, chap. , pp. ; Sennert, , I, chap. , pp.
(, I, chap. , pp. ).
descartes, basso, and toletus
vol. , pp. and , eme sries, pp. . There is also an account in van
Melsen , I, chap. , pp. .
chapter five
For example, some argued that since every natural body has an actually
determined substantial form, every natural body must have a determi-
nate assortment of accidents and its quantity must be limited to some
particular range. Moreover, they asserted limits even for the four basic
elements (earth, air, fire, water), which have no determinate magnitude
of themselves and intrinsically; the elements might be augmented indef-
initely, if there were matter enough, and their division can be continued
indefinitely. They do have an extrinsic limitation, however, with respect
to prime matter: there may not be enough prime matter to sustain a form
and the amount of prime matter is finite. Moreover, elements cannot be
condensed or rarefied, that is, they cannot have their quantity changed
indefinitely, without being corrupted. For example, earth cannot be as
rarefied as fire, and fire cannot be as condensed as earth; when air is
condensed too much, it is turned into water, and water overly rarefied
is turned into air.28 Thus, for a late scholastic, rarefaction and conden-
sation, that is, augmentation and diminution in quantity, could result in
generation and corruption, under appropriate circumstances. There is,
then, a natural minimum of any given element, which is to say that late
scholasticism could countenance a kind of atomism. This doctrine of a
natural minimum became a bridge between Aristotelian and alchemical
theories of matter.
Daniel Sennert, Professor of Medicine at Wittenberg, provides a good
example of a corpuscularian alchemist working within a scholastic tradi-
tion of minima.29 Sennert was a prolific author of works in natural philos-
ophy, chemistry, and medicine. His books went through numerous edi-
tions, with several of them being translated into English. In his mature
work Sennert announced his aim as the correction of Aristotle by reason
and experience.
For neither would I be of those number of rash innovators, whether
Paracelsians or Chymists, or how ever otherwise called, who endeavor
wholly to banish from the Schools the ancient philosophy, which is come
to us chiefly from the Writings of Aristotle: nor yet would I be reckoned
amongst them who are not ashamed in this Age of ours publickly to
profess, that they had rather err with Aristotle and Galen, than speak the
truth with any later author.30
31 Sennert , pp. .
32 Sennert , p. .
33 Sennert , p. .
34 Sennert , p. .
chapter five
The second atoms, which Sennert specifically identifies with the prin-
ciples of the chemistssuch as quicksilver, vitiol, sulfur, and saltare the
first mixtures, or second-order corpuscles composed out of the atomic
elements. These are rarely divided but other compound bodies normally
resolve into them. For there are (in the second place) Atomes of another
kind besides the Elementary (which if any man wil term first mixt bodies,
he may do so as he please) into which as similar parts other compounds
are resolved.35 Sennerts hierarchy of particles enables him to recover
the alchemical tradition as a middle-level theory within a broadly Aris-
totelian framework of the four elements differentiated at the basic level
by their natures.
A third major change concerned Aristotles denial of the void, and
specifically, motion in the void. Aristotle concluded against the atomists
that motion is impossible in the void, using an argument deriving from
his principles of motion. A body moving by impact moves in proportion
to the force exerted on it and in inverse proportion to the resistance
of the medium in which it is situated. Since a void would provide no
resistance, the body would move with a speed beyond any ratio36
but such instantaneous movement is impossible. Scholastics attempted
to soften this and similar arguments, not so as to accept the existence
of the void, but so as to accept its possibility, that is, to argue that God
could create a void.37 As a consequence, there were numerous discussions
of Aristotles argument about the impossibility of motion in the void,
many of them prompted by an internal criticism of Aristotles position; in
particular, it was noted that, in his system, the heavens have a determined
speed of rotation but are not slowed down by the resistance of any
medium. If one applied Aristotles reasoning about the impossibility
of motion in the void to the heavens, then the heavens would have
to rotate with a speed beyond any ratio. On the other hand, rejecting
35 Sennert , p. .
36 Physics b. Aristotle also argued that the void is impossible, if it is thought
to be a place with nothing in it, that is, a location actually existing apart from any
occupying body (Physics IV, chap. ).
37 Although attacks on Aristotles views about the void preceded the condemnations of
various propositions in , they gained theological inspiration from them (see Schmitt
for the influence of Philoponus in the views of Toletus and the Coimbrans, among
others). Among the relevant condemned propositions were That God could not move
the heavens in a straight line, the reason being that he would then leave a vacuum, and
That he who generates the world in its totality posits a vacuum, because place necessarily
precedes that which is generated in it; and so before the generation of the world there
would have been a place with nothing in it, which is a vacuum.
descartes, basso, and toletus
38 This conception was developed by Thomas Aquinas, among others. See Duhem
, chap. .
39 Toletus , IIII, quaest. IX. Eustachius a Sancto Paulo agreed, calling motion in
42 I cite the edition; we should note that the subtitle is In quibus abstrusa veterum
physiologia restauratur, et Aristotelis errores solidis rationibus refelluntur.
43 Basso , p. ; see also the resum, p. : quod ex primis illis qua constituebant,
rerum particulis, ita res omnes componi assererent, ut in composito propriam naturam
retinerent.
44 Basso , pp. .
45 Basso , pp. .
46 Basso , p. : cum agimus de atomis, censemus eas a Deo creatas, quod fuit
praemonendum.
47 Basso , pp. .
48 Basso , p. .
49 Basso , p. .
descartes, basso, and toletus
generetur: sed tantum earundem partium quarum facta erat copulatio, fiat resolutio . . .;
pp. : in materialibus discrepare videantur, in eo tament concordabant, quod,
cum nihil ex nihilo fieri constantes assererent, negarent cujus quam generationem aliud
esse, quam principiorum praexistentium diversam compositionem.
51 Basso , p. et seq.: Certum est autem, ni detur forma substantialis, non dari
mutationem substantivam, qualem isti volunt: sed generationem esse nihil aliud quam
quod veteres voluerunt.
52 Basso credits the Stoics for having discovered the ether, or Spiritus (, p. :
Natura abhorret.
chapter five
59 Basso , pp. .
60 Basso , p. .
61 Basso , p. .
62 Basso , pp. et seq.
63 Basso , p. .
64 Basso , pp. , .
65 Basso , p. .
66 Basso , pp. .
descartes, basso, and toletus
as directing its motion to its proper ends: By means of this spirit God
moves the single elements not differently than they would move if this
motive power were innate in them.67
Basso, then, is a kind of Democritean atomist (as opposed to a minima
naturalia theorist): his atoms are indestructible and do not transmute
into one another. However, he is a rare kind of atomist, who denies the
void, filling his universe with an ether that does not combine with other
atoms. His atoms provide him with a decidedly nonscholastic theory of
change: all change is due to the local motion of atoms. Rarefaction and
condensation is not the acquisition or loss of a qualitative form; the ether
simply inflates or deflates a body. But Bassos universe is inert. Its primary
cause of motion is God, who imparts motion to the ether; the ether, in
turn, moves the various particles.
Early Descartes () on
Corpuscles, Rarefaction, and Subtle Matter
assuming (la matiere doit prendre successivement toutes les formes dont elle est capable),
Principles III, art. and To Mersenne, January , AT II, p. .
descartes, basso, and toletus
ether is not any different than any other element. There is, however, an
aspect of Descartes subtle matter that does resonate with what Basso says
about his ether. Descartes notes that his first and second elements do not
enter into composition with his third element:
But we should note that, even though there are parts of these three ele-
ments mixed with one another in all bodies, nonetheless, properly speak-
ing, only those which (because of their size or the difficulty they have in
moving) can be ascribed to the third element compose all the bodies we
see about us . . . We may picture all these bodies as sponges; even though
a sponge has a quantity of pores, or small holes, which are always full of
air or water or some other liquid, we nonetheless do not think that these
liquids enter into its composition.80
Finally, in contrast with Basso, God is the cause of the motion of all matter
for Descartes, not just the cause of the motion of the ether; Descartes
world, unlike Bassos, is not inert.81 Motion, as Descartes says, is a quality
of matter; it is preserved by God in his continual recreation.
The contrast can be made more explicit if one considers motion in
the void. Descartes agrees with the late Scholastics and disagrees with
Aristotle and Basso in holding that motion is possible in the void. For
Descartes, the state of a body would not change in the void;82 for a late
scholastic, an impetus would not be corrupted in the void. In contrast,
according to Aristotle, motion in the void would be instantaneous and,
thus, impossible; and for Basso, a gap in the universe would prevent the
ether from exercising its activity.
scholastics, Descartes looking more like Aristotle than the Aristotelians. In Principles II,
art. , Descartes argued for the impossibility of empty space, both in and out of the
world. Thinking of a vessel, its concave shape, and the extension that must be contained
in this concavity, he asserted: it would be as contradictory of us to conceive of a mountain
without a valley, as to conceive of this concavity without the extension contained in
it, or of this extension without an extended substance. In fact, he decided that if God
were to remove the body contained in that vessel and did not allow anything else to
take its place, the sides of the vessel would thereby become contiguous. However, even
though Descartes thinks the void is impossible, he does not think that motion would
be impossible in the void if, per impossibile, there were a void. Interestingly, Descartes
defined void as a space filled with matter that neither increases not diminishes its
motion, To Mersenne, November , AT II, .
chapter five
advice about the denial of substantial forms. When the authorities at Louvain wanted to
condemn some Cartesian propositions, including Descartes denial of substantial forms
(see chapter ), they could not find the rejection of the doctrine in the Principles, but
were able to cite a passage from Replies VI, sec. .
chapter six
1 Galileo , vol. , p. .
2 Galileo , vol. , p. .
chapter six
3 AT I, .
scholastics and the new astronomy
amusingly . . . One after another, all attempts to cleanse the heavens of new
celestial bodies came to grief. Philosophers had come up against a set of
facts which their theories were unable to explain. The more persistent and
determined adversaries of Galileo had to give up arguing and to resort to
threats.4
Thus, the schoolmen were bookish philosophers who failed to grasp
some obvious facts, constructed silly arguments, and ultimately resorted
to threats. Moreover, for confirmation of the view, one can always point to
the story about Cesare Cremonini who refused to look through Galileos
telescope. That ostrich-like story does capture the imagination. It is made
contending that such resistance was warranted: [Galileo] offers no theoretical reasons
why the telescope should be expected to give a true picture of the sky. . . . Nor does the
initial experience with the telescope provide such reasons. The first telescopic observa-
tions of the sky are indistinct, indeterminate, contradictory and in conflict with what
everyone can see with his unaided eyes. And the only theory that could have helped to
separate telescopic illusions from veridical phenomena was refuted by simple tests, ,
pp. , .
chapter six
5 Drake , pp. , . Not to excuse Cremonini, but Galileo also set about to
hold exhibitions of the newly discovered phenomena and not all of these turned out
perfectly well. At times, the guests at the displays were not able to see the noveltiesor
anything at all, for that matterwith their spyglasses.
6 La France avait dj repandu tant de pleurs / Pour la mort de son Roy, que l empire
de l onde / Gros de flots ravageait la terre ses fleurs, / D un dluge second menaant
tout le monde; // Lorsque l astre du jour, qui faisait la ronde / Autour de l Univers, meu
des proches malheurs / Qui hastaient devers nous leur course vagabonde / Lui parla de la
sorte, au fort de ses douleurs; // France de qui les pleurs, pour l amour de ton Prince, / Nui-
sent par leur excs toute autre province, / Cesse de t affliger sur son vide tombeau; // Car
Dieu l ayant tire tout entier de la terre / Au ciel de Jupiter maintenant il esclaire / Pour
servir aux mortels de cleste flambeau. Sur la mort du roy Henry le Grand et sur la descou-
verte de quelques nouvelles planettes ou estoilles errantes autour de Jupiter, faicte l anne
d icelle par Galile, clbre mathmaticien du grand duc de Florence, in Rochemonteix
, t. I, pp. nn.
scholastics and the new astronomy
It is well known, but perhaps not well enough appreciated, that the
Jesuit mathematicians of the Collegio Romano accepted most of Galileos
astronomical observations. In fact, as early as November , the Jesuit
mathematicians at the Collegio Romano had constructed their own spy-
glass and were making independent observations.7 Initially skeptical,
they were in a position to answer some wide-ranging queries about
Galileos observations by the head of the Collegio, Cardinal Roberto Bel-
larmine, within a week of his request.
On April , , Bellarmine wrote to the Jesuit mathematicians
asking whether they could validate Galileos observations, saying that he
himself had seen some very wonderful things concerning the Moon and
Venus through a spyglass. Bellarmine asked whether they could confirm
the multitude of fixed stars invisible with the naked eye, . . . that Saturn
is not a simple star but three stars joined together, . . . that the star of
Venus changes its shape, waxing and waning like the Moon, . . . that the
Moon has a rough and uneven surface, and that four movable stars go
around the planet of Jupiter.8
The Jesuit mathematicians, Christopher Clavius, Christopher Grien-
berger, Odo Malcote, and Giovanni Paolo Lembo, responded in the affir-
mative on April , agreeing that, using the spyglass, more stars can be
seen than ever before, there are handles to Saturn, phases of Venus,
and moons around Jupiter. However, they did not think that moun-
tains on the moon could be observed using the telescope. They granted
the great inequality of the Moons surface, but added, Father Clavius
thinks it more probable that the surface is not uneven, but rather that the
lunar body is not of uniform density and has rarer and denser parts.9
The Jesuits acceptance of Galileos observations was almost complete. In
fact, Clavius, the author of an important and extremely popular scholas-
tic textbook in astronomy, Sphaera, was even moved to include a brief
account of the Galilean novelties in the ultimate edition of his work, pub-
lished that year:
I do not want to hide from the reader that not long ago a certain instrument
was brought from Belgium . . .. This instrument shows many more stars
in the firmament than can be seen in any way without it . . . and when
the moon is a crescent or half full, it appears so remarkably fractured
and rough that I cannot marvel enough that there is such unevenness in
the lunar body. Consult the reliable little book by Galileo Galilei, printed
in Venice in and called Sidereus Nuncius, which describes various
observations of the stars first made by him.
lenses clearly show.12 The Galilean novelties also made their way to Lou-
vain. In , Libertus Fromondus, a future correspondent of Descartes,
was a young professor of philosophy. That year he was asked to preside
over some quodlibetal exercises. Fromondus published his contribution
to the discussions in and inserted an astronomical fantasy, Peregri-
natio Caelestis, in the publication.13 As he said in the preface to the work,
he wanted to give his students a taste of the wonders that he and oth-
ers had seen through the telescope; Fromondus regretted that he did not
have as good an instrument as Galileos, which allowed him to distin-
guish the triple system of Saturn, and with which Fromondus speculates
he might have discovered more and more curious things. In his fantasy, a
guardian spirit (Genius) riding the winged horse Pegasus took a dream-
ing Fromondus up to the heavens. There, Fromondus observed the rough
surface of the moon, the sunspots, the phases of Venus, and the moons of
Jupiter. He then noticed Saturns triple system and referred to Galileo as
having first made the discovery (citing at length from a letter of Galileo of
November ) and he mentioned the Milky Way with its many stars
more stars than ever seen beforefirst seen through the telescope. In the
process, Fromondus disputed the Aristotelian theory of elements and the
existence of the sphere of fire. He allowed that the moon might be cov-
ered with water. And because of the existence of supra-lunary comets,
he rejected the mechanism of solid spheres, epicycles and eccentrics,
in favor of a fluid ethereal substance. In his fantasy, Fromondus made
a number of statements approving of the Copernican system and the
hypothesis of a plurality of inhabited worlds, which he thought consis-
tent with Copernicanism.14 Still, though only flirting with the Coperni-
can hypothesis, Fromondus showed himself to be well acquainted with
the Galilean celestial novelties.
Before moving to a discussion the Galilean celestial novelties and
their relation to traditional astronomy and cosmology, we should briefly
note the steps taken by the Catholic Church, in , with respect to
Copernican astronomy. On February , , the Holy Office prepared
an assessment of two propositions attributed to Copernicus: (i) The sun
is at the center of the world and completely devoid of local motion;
(ii) The earth is not at the center of the world, nor motionless, but
moves as a whole and also with diurnal motion. The Church asserted,
15 Finocchiaro , p. .
16 Finocchiaro , pp. .
17 Fromondus , p. . Monchamp , pp. ; Van Nouhuys , pp.
.
scholastics and the new astronomy
18 See Ariew b.
19 Du Chevreul , p. . Du Chevreul was born in Coutances in and died in
Paris in . He was associated with the University of Paris and the Collge Harcourt,
except for the two years before his death, when he was Professor of Philosophy at the Col-
lge Royal. The son of a magistrate, he studied humanities and philosophy, and received
a Master of Arts from Paris (). He continued his education in the higher faculty
of theology and was awarded the degree of Bachelor of Divinity in . Du Chevreul
began teaching at Harcourt in . During his lifetime, he held various administrative
academic offices, including those of rector and principal. He must have taught math-
ematics early in his career, but he was teaching philosophy by . According to his
manuscript lecture notes conserved at the Bibliothque Municipale de Cherbourg, du
Chevreul taught Logic and Ethics in , , and ; he taught
Metaphysics and Physics in and . Although he did not publish his
philosophy lectures, he did publish two mathematical texts, Arithmetica (Paris ) and
Sphaera (Paris , , and ).
20 See Lattis .
21 De la Grange .
chapter six
23 See Baumgartner .
24 La figure F represente certains astres qui tournent autour du soleil et que d aucuns
appellent, les taches du soleil, ainsi qu il se dira cy-aprs, Bourdin , p. .
25 L on a decouvert qu il y en avait [des astres] au dessous du soleil, lesquels faisoient
paraistre en luy comme des taches. Il est vray que l on a remarqu qu ils faisoient leur
chapter six
the accepted theory, that would simply make them denser parts of celes-
tial spheres around the sun. As the Dominican, Antoine Goudin put it:
It could be asked what are the spots that obscure the sun. I ve already said,
they seem to be a denser part of the celestial spheres which, when nearing
the sun, following unknown revolutions, become interposed between us
and the star and obscure its brilliance with their passage; Mercury has been
taken for a sunspot in this way for a long time.26
However, even if the sunspots had not been thought of as small planets
rotating around the sun, but genuine spots on the sun itself, they still
would have caused few problems, since they could have been treated in
the manner of moon spots, that is, denser parts of the celestial body
itself. As Ren de Ceriziers explained in Le philosophe franais: We
can gather from this small discourse that if there were spots on the
sun or stars similar to the spots on the moon, they would arise only
from the diversity of their parts,by which he meant their density and
rarity.27
There is a full exposition of the problem in Goudins Philosophie, an
influential late seventeenth century textbook with at least a dozen edi-
tions and even a definitive nineteenth century Latin edition and French
translation. The problem, according to Goudin, is as follows:
Spots are produced and disappear in the sun itself; they have sometimes
been seen in such quantity that the star became obscured by them, some-
thing which lasted a whole year . . . And now, as recently observed, spots
are produced on that star, less sensible no doubt, but more numerous and
similar to smoke or to a dark fog, and this cannot be explained without
substantial alteration of the star.28
But Goudin, as an Aristotelian, cannot accept substantial alteration in
the heavens. So the problem is particularly difficult; he first rehearses the
traditional answer, but must reject it:
revolution tout autour, tellement qu ils prennent quelquefois le dessus. Il y peut en avoir
encore en beaucoups d autres endroits que les yeux des hommes ne peuvent descouvrir:
mais tant des uns que des autres, il semble que l on ne scauroit rapporter la vraye cause
de leur rang, puisque nous ne pensons pas qu ils se cedent rien l un l autre dans leur
situation, Sorel , p. .
26 Goudin [], vol. III, p. ; , p. . Goudin also confesses that he
has not been able to see the sunspots himself since they were exceedingly rare at the
time.
27 De Ceriziers , p. .
28 Goudin [], vol. III, p. ; , p. .
scholastics and the new astronomy
Assuredly, the argument derived from the motion of the sunspots is not
unworthy; there are sunspots disappearing when advancing from the bor-
ders to the middle of the disk; others appearing instantaneously in the
middle; and then another having been seen alone expanding into sev-
eral. Perhaps the causes of these phenomena are in the bodies not on the
sun or in the upper heaven, but in the sublunary air; perhaps also they
are condensed exhalations that, in some way, follow the motion of the
star . . . but this hypothesis cannot explain the spots observed recently,
since it has been practically demonstrated that they are very near the
sun.
Goudin argues instead for a version of the doctrine that sunspots are
small stars around the sun:
We must therefore say that these spots are denser portions of the celestial
spheres near the sun, which, following a determined path, are encountered
with the sun and sometime reunite and sometime separate, then show us
one, then another of their faces. Allowing us to see them at times, then
disappearing; they first seem to us a single spot, then several separated
spots, and these apparent spots grow or diminish according to the com-
binations of these spheres, all of this being nothing more than a certain
number of optical effects . . . One easily conceives that the heavens proxi-
mate to the sun, such as those of Venus or Mercury or others nearer still,
can have certain parts that are more opaque, and that when these parts
meet with the sun, they can show it to us covered by spots, in the way
that less experienced eyes saw Mercury. But the doctrine that the sun lets
some smoke, fog, scum, ashes, or other such things escapeand all that
in order to explain the spots seen there and the fact that these produc-
tions remain so long attached to that luminous staris something I cannot
understand.29
For Goudin it is difficult to account for the spots, given that they appear
and disappear. He explains them as optical illusions, combinations of
denser portions of the celestial spheres in motion near the sun; he tells us
that Mercury had once been mistaken as a sunspot. He seeks an explana-
tion, a piecemeal adjustment of his Aristotelian theory, but he rejects any
explanation involving substantial change in the heavens, which would be
a denial of the fundamentals of his Aristotelian cosmology. This explains
why the theory of sunspots as small stellar objects lasted so long; as late
as , one can find in the Philosophia universalis of Jean Duhamel: It is
probable that the sunspots are nothing other than small planets revolving
around the sun.30
31 Du Chevreul , pp. .
32 Vincent , vol. , p. ; see also Pierre du Moulin , II, chap. and : Les
estoiles tant fixes qu errantes ne sont autre chose qu une partie du ciel plus espaisse que
les autres parties. Car le reste du ciel est diaphane et transparent: Mais les estoilles par leur
epaisseur arrestent la lumiere du soleil comme miroers, et nous la renvoyent . . . Quant
aux taches qui paraissent en la lune, elles ne sont autre chose que parties du corps de la
lune moins espaisses que le reste, et qui n arrestent point les rayons du soleil. Comme
quand un miroer en certains endroits n a point d argent vif en derriere.
33 Duhamel , vol. , p. .
34 Dupleix , p. .
35 Bouju , vol. I, chap. XVIII: Que l element pretendu du feu n est point, pp.
.
chapter six
do not have their own light, but receive the light of the sun differentially
on account their density and rarity.36 His lunar theory followed from the
general theory; he accounts for the lunar spots by the fact that light
does not reflect against the parts on the moon which are rarer than
others, given that these parts lack the thickness to stop and retain the
light. In this way, Bouju could maintain a fairly standard theory for
the spots on the lunar surface: the cause of this defect [the variety and
deformity in the moon which is not in the other stars] might be that
the moon is close to the lower bodies, in which obscurity and deformity
dominate.37 Lest anyone accuse him of giving up too much Aristotelian
doctrine, Bouju was careful to uphold the (de facto) incorruptibility of
heaven:
Since it does not appear to us . . . that the sun is of another matter than the
other lower bodies, its incorruptibility must arise from its more excellent
form than theirs or because contrary agents which can corrupt and alter it
do not rise up to it, although it is corruptible with respect to its nature, in
the manner of air and other elements.38
As with sunspots, the lunar spots are explained without having to resort
to substantial change in the heavens. However, Bouju, possibly under
some Stoic influence, had accepted a version of Aristotelianism in which
there can be substantial change in the heavens, at least in principle; for
most Aristotelians, substantial change in the heavens would not have
been acceptable. Fortunately, even if one admitted that the spots on the
moon could only have been accounted for by postulating mountains, one
did not have to accede to there being substantial change on the moon.
That is a point Goudin wanted to make. Unlike many other Aris-
totelians, Goudin accepted the conclusion that the spots were to be inter-
preted as mountains on the moon:
pas incorruptible).
scholastics and the new astronomy
Comets
43 See Barker and Goldstein (). As I have said above, Fromondus, in his fantasy,
disputed the Aristotelian theory of elements and the existence of the sphere of fire and,
because of the existence of supra-lunary comets, he also rejected the mechanism of solid
spheres, epicycles and eccentrics, in favor of a fluid ethereal substance (similar but not
identical to a Stoic pneuma). Thus, in , Fromondus accepted a cosmology like the
one adopted by Tycho Brahe. I should specify that Fromondus accepts a fluid ethereal
substance in the heavens, but he is clear in his rejection of Stoic or Tychonic pneuma,
which he thinks is the result of mixing up corruptible and incorruptible substances. See
Fromondus , p. , and Meinel b.
44 See, for example, Gaukroger , pp. , . The crystal spheres are a rhetorical
move by Tycho. Aristotelians accepted solid spheres for the epicycles and eccentrics of
their planetary heavens. A crystal sphere is traditionally postulated as the ninth sphere,
above the firmament of fixed stars, representing the Biblical water above the firmament.
Tycho could have no argument that places his comet above the firmament, crashing
through the crystal sphere; rather his argument would be that the lack of measurable
parallax of the comet would place it above the sphere of the moon, whose parallax is
measurable.
scholastics and the new astronomy
view was appreciated at the time, as can be seen in a student thesis from
circa . In a series of theses about Copernicus and the new astron-
omy, there is a very brief discussion of the observational consequences
of the Tychonic system, though without Tycho being named; among the
consequences are: Comets and new stars would be generated and would
move in the heavens above the moon.45 But Tycho Brahes parallax mea-
surement was neither universally accepted nor without conceptual diffi-
culties. As Dupleix explained,
Since comets are elevated very high into the region of air and are moved
and shaken by the celestial bodies that carry them, the elementary fire, and
the upper air, and also because they look like true stars, because of their
flame, several ancient philosophers, and even Seneca and the common
people ignorant of this matter still, take comets to be true stars. But this
ignorance is too crass, given that stars are all in the heavens and comets are
in the region of air below the moon, as is demonstrated by astronomical
instruments [note in the margin: Regiomontanus, de Cometis].46
Dupleixs reference to Regiomontanus, a marginal note on his com-
ment about astronomical instruments, indicates that, some decades after
Tychos measurements, some scholars still preferred Regiomontanus ear-
lier parallactic measurements concluding that comets are sublunary.47
As Dupleix implies as well, the question of the composition of the
heavens and the nature and location of comets was a standard dispute
between the Stoics, such as Seneca, and the Aristotelians. As with most
everything Stoic, fluid heavens could also be incorporated into Aris-
totelianism; cosmologists like Fromondus would not be alone if they
brought some Stoic elements into Aristotelian philosophy. The aforemen-
tioned Bouju had argued as an Aristotelian, two years before Fromondus,
that there is no sphere of fire and no absolute division between the sublu-
nary and superlunary world, but Bouju upheld the de facto incorruptibil-
ity of heaven; he posited some kind of ethereal substance in the heavens,
and even accepted, in principle, the possibility of substantial change in
the heavens, with the Stoics, but he maintained a standard Aristotelian
account of comets:
45 Sententia Copernici de motu terrae circa solem omnes apparentias non saluat, &
habet alia incommoda. Si terra constituatur centrum circulorum quos luna, sol, & stellae
fixae conficiunt, sol vero eorum quos reliqui planetae, facile omnia defendentur. Mars
nonnunquam terris propior quam sol apparet. Borbonius circa .
46 Dupleix , pp. .
47 For more on Regiomontanus measurements, see Jervis .
chapter six
The fire of which the comets are enflamed and of which they burn is slow
and moderate; comets are not raised up on account of the weight of their
matter, but they move from east to west in accordance with the motion
of heaven, although they do not do so with regularity. The height of their
motion is less than that of the planets and other stars; it demonstrates that
they remain in the middle region of the air, in the same way as do those
lights in the form of stars which seem to fall from heaven, which are only
meteors, of the nature of comets, and not true stars, being generated and
corrupted almost in the same instant.48
However, Bouju accommodated other novel astronomical phenomena,
such as novas; he stated:
We have seen in our time, during , a new star appearing in Calliope
and lasting two years. In the beginning this star seemed to surpass Venus
in size and clarity and two months later it decreased in these respects, such
that it no longer seemed to exceed a star of the third magnitude; it kept this
quantity for the duration of two years, when it disappeared. It cannot be
said that this star was in the air where comets usually happen, because it
appeared in the same way to all who saw it, in whatever region it was, and it
always moved from east to west like the other stars; this could not happen
if it were located only in the middle region of air, the place of comets.49
Bouju showed himself to be open to the possibility of comets moving well
above the region of air, something he accepted for the nova of , but
he did not think he had enough evidence in to claim that any comet
resided there.
Questions such as the nature and location of comets had not been
definitively decided by , a year marked by a succession of three
comets visible to the naked eye, culminating in the great comet of .
These events resulted in the publication of multiple treatises about comets
by numerous observers, not the least being those of Fromondus, of the
Jesuit Horatio Grassi, and of Galileo, responding to Grassi, in defense of
his own position, as elucidated by his disciple, Mario Guiducci.50
Fromondus wrote his treatise on the great comet of as a response
to a dissertation on that comet which he requested from his colleague
Feyens; he then proceeded to publish the two treatises together. Feyens
treatise used his observations of the comet to dispute the Aristotelian
theory of comets as burning terrestrial vapors and reworked arguments
48 Bouju , vol. I, pp. (I. Phys. XI, chap. XII: Des Comettes).
49 Bouju , vol. I, p. .
50 There were very many treatises published on the Comet of . See Drake and
from Seneca to support the view that comets belonged to the genus of
heavenly bodies, thus placing comets above the sphere of the moon.
Ultimately, Feyens used the observations of Tycho Brahe and Galileo
to argue against both the existence of solid planetary spheres and the
incorruptibility of the heavens. Consistently with the Church Fathers
and Scriptures, Feyens adopted the view that there are three heavens:
the fluid planetary heaven delimited by the solid firmament of the fixed
stars, above which is located the Empyrean, that is, the resting place of
the blessed.51
Fromondus received Feyens treatise very favorably, even claiming
(ironically) that as a result, one can see that the comet foretold the death
of a Prince, namely, Aristotle, whose theory of comets as meteorologi-
cal phenomena the Peripatetics needed to bury.52 And Fromondus trea-
tise, like that of Feyens, systematically argued against the Aristotelian
theory. Fromondus work is composed of eight chapters: a descriptive
first chapter about the great comet of , regarding its appearance and
motion, and five subsequent chapters consisting of arguments about var-
ious aspects of that comet. In these chapters, Fromondus argues that the
comet of is not a fiery exhalation: because of (i) the height of such
exhalations, (ii) the nature of fire, (iii) its lack of scintillation, (iv) its
motion, and (v) its tail. The treatise ends with a chapter about the dis-
tance and magnitude of the comet and another, extremely short chapter,
about whether comets presage other events on earth.
The interesting thing is that the five arguments are alike in that they are
all basically Aristotelian arguments employed to attack an Aristotelian
conclusion: Fromondus uses some entrenched Aristotelian principles
against the Aristotelian conclusion that comets are terrestrial exhalations.
In the argument about the height of terrestrial exhalations, Fromondus
argues that such exhalations would have to rise beyond the maximum
height for terrestrial exhalations, to where comets are usually observed,
and in the process would become extremely subtle and rare. But then,
according to Peripatetic theory, they would have also become incapable
of being observed on earth.53 Moreover, if comets were fiery exhala-
tions, they could not last as long as they did, because of the volatile and
dissoluble nature of fire.54 And if comets consisted of fire, they would
55 Fromondus a, pp. , .
56 Fromondus a, p. .
57 Fromondus a, p. .
58 Fromondus a, p. .
59 Fromondus a, p. .
scholastics and the new astronomy
60 Fromondus a, p. .
61 Fromondus a, p. .
62 Du Chevreul , pp. .
63 See du Chevreul , pp. .
chapter six
agreed by all, that is, six new ones on top of the seven classically known
ones. He further multiplies the count by noting that others add another
thirty new planets circling about the Sun, namely Jean Tardes Bourbon
stars.64
The discoveries acknowledged by du Chevreul entail modifications in
the doctrine of the number of the heavens. According to Aristotle and
the Aristotelians, the number of heavens, distinguished by their different
motions,65 is at least eight; instead, du Chevreul counts only five planetary
heavens: those of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, the Sun, and the Moon.66 Missing
in this count are the heavens for the new planets and those of Venus
and Mercury. Du Chevreul asserts that, as shown by the optical tube,
Mercury and Venus circle around the Sun, that is, they can be found
above, below, and next to the Sun. Thus, the center of their orbs must
be the Sun; any other arrangement would require the interpenetration
of orbs, causing a vacuumand this is impossible in nature. According
to du Chevreul, only the astronomers of his generation, using an optical
instrument that can detect more stars in the Milky Way and other parts
of the firmament, can see that Venus and Mercury are located next to the
Sun, above, and below it. Venus and Mercury thus orbit the Sun as the
Moon orbits the Earth, within the Suns heaven.67 The situation is similar
to that of Galileos stars around Jupiter and the two planets circling
Saturn. The same is true for the thirty Bourbon planets or shadows
around the Sun. Du Chevreuls five heavens are, in order: ) That of the
Moon. ) Of the Sun, consisting of the Sun itself in the middle of its
heaven, surrounded by the Bourbon stars, Mercury and Venus. ) Of
Mars. ) Of Jupiter surrounded by the four Medicean stars. And ) Of
Saturn, in the middle of which Saturn sits, with two concentric orbs or
satellites.
It is not difficult to see that du Chevreul is the legitimate heir to
Clavius: he has managed to accept the observations made by Galileo
in with the assistance of the telescope, but does not regard
these phenomena as evidence for either the Copernican or the Tychonic
system. This is made quite clear in his chapter on eccentric and epicyclic
orbs. There, he argues for the necessity of eccentrics and epicycles and
formally rejects Tychos view of the universe. He asserts that Mars cannot
64 Du Chevreul , pp. .
65 Du Chevreul , p. .
66 Du Chevreul , p. .
67 Du Chevreul , pp. .
scholastics and the new astronomy
be below the Sun, as Tycho would have it, because that would make
the heavens permeable and go against the appearances.68 Further, in his
section on the matter of the world, he denies the kind of language the
followers of Tycho used, that the stars wander in the heavens like fish
swimming in water.69 Tychos measurement of the parallax of the comet
of did not settle the matter for du Chevreul; it did not require him to
think of the planetary heavens as liquid and permeable. In his lectures on
Aristotles Meteorology, he continued to claim that comets are sublunary
flames.70
Scholastics were not the only ones to have rejected Tychos parallac-
tic measurements and his fluid heavens. One might even count Galileo
and his disciple Guiducci among Tychos opponents. Horatio Grassi, a
Jesuit astronomer, wanted to argue against Aristotle based on the lack
of observable parallax for the comet of . Galileo and Guiducci dis-
puted his findings, contending that one cannot use the parallax of a comet
to calculate its location: Whoever wishes the argument from parallax
to bear upon comets must first prove that comets are real things.71 For
Galileo and his disciple, parallax is a valid method only when one has
a real and permanent object; for example, one cannot use the parallax
of a rainbow to calculate its location. Thus, the parallax of a comet (or
its lack of parallax) cannot give us its supra-lunary location and is not
evidence for concluding that the Aristotelians are wrong (or for conclud-
ing further that there is an imperfect terrestrial object in the heavens)
unless, of course, we had previously accepted comets as objects whose
nature is terrestrial, and not meteorological phenomena or mere appear-
ances. Galileo in proposed that comets are luminous reflections of
atmospheric exhalations, an account similar to the one he had proposed
in and similar to the Aristotelian account; quoting Galileo: The
substance of the comet . . . may be believed to dissolve in a few days,
and its shape, which is not circularly bounded but confused and indis-
tinct, gives us an indication that its material is more tenuous than fog or
smoke.72
68 Du Chevreul , pp. .
69 Du Chevreul , p. .
70 Du Chevreul , Ms. Cherbourg , fol. .
71 Galileo, Il saggiatore, in Drake and OMalley , pp. . Galileo is quoting
from a debate between his student Mario Guidicci and Grassi, supporting Guiducci
against Grassi.
72 Drake and OMalley , p. .
chapter six
rundam parallaxi, p. .
scholastics and the new astronomy
from place to place, from South to North and vice versathat which a
mere positional appearance could not do.74
Fromondus revisits the opinion of Guiducci and Galileo that comets
are terrestrial exhalations in his second chapter, on the matter of comets.
Against their view, he repeats his analysis from that such exhalations
climbing so high would become so rarified that they would become
invisible.75 Moreover, in his fourth chapter, on the motion of comets,
Fromondus argues that terrestrial exhalations do not have the lengthy
motions exhibited by comets; if Galileo and Guiducci were right, the
proper motion of comets above the moon would measure only one or
two degrees of arc for the whole of their duration.76
Fromondus argues against Galileo and Guiducci on three separate
occasions. Interestingly, on one occasion he singles out an argument as
belonging to Guiducci alone, that the curvature of the comets tail is
caused by refraction. Fromondus dismisses this explanation, arguing that
if this were so, the comets tail would be more curved at the horizon,
where greater and more vapors are in abundance. Fromondus asserts that
such a phenomenon was not observed for the comet of or for earlier
comets. He had obviously considered seriously Galileos views and those
of Guiducciwell enough to reject themand well enough to be able to
differentiate between them.
While Fromondus was more confident in that their lack of par-
allax indicated that comets were celestial, indecision about the paral-
lactic argument and Tychos measurement of the parallax of the
comet continued. Parisian textbooks from the period do not seem to have
integrated the debate between Grassi and Galileo into their discussions,
except perhaps to the extent that they seem genuinely undecided about
whether comets are sublunary or supralunary. Franois Le Res, in his
Cursus Philosophicus, had a long discussion of comets and parallax, pro
and con Aristotle, including Tychos observations, finally concluding for
Aristotlebarely. He argued that new stars are comets. He did not resolve
the question of parallax, but merely discussed various options he seemed
to think were all ultimately consistent with Aristotelian principles, if not
Aristotles actual doctrine about comets being fiery exhalations. In order
77 Le Res , vol. II, part , pp. . Le Res possibilities had been previously
discussed by Jean Crassot in his Physica. Thus Parisian indecision about comets
preceded the debate between Galileo and Grassi.
78 Lesclache , p. , table xi of the physics.
79 De Ceriziers , pp. : Pour les comtes, certains ont cru qu elles s engen-
droient dans le ciel, ils avouent par la corruptible: d autres qu elles se formoient des
exhalaisons que le soleil attiroit jusques-l. Appolonius tient que ce sont des astres
vagabonds, qui se montrent et se retirent divers temps, ayant leur mouvement du haut
du ciel en bas la diffrence des autres planettes qui tournent, ce qui suppose les cieux
liquides.
80 De Ceriziers , pp. .
81 Du Moulin , IV, chap. , pp. . By , du Moulin no longer resided at
some comets are not fiery exhalations. Du Moulin, however, expected the
moving fiery exhalations to point away from their direction of motion
and not to point away from the sun. He also constructed an argument
about the distance of comets based on their being visible at many places
at the same time; this is obviously a common-sense way of getting the
parallax arguments across. Du Moulin, like Fromondus, concluded that
there are two kinds of comets, sublunary fiery exhalations la Aristotle,
and celestial objects: I believe that both opinions are true and that there
are two kinds of comets. The comets of the first kind are miraculous
and celestial and above the moon; and consequently they are more
meaningful.82 By the second half of the seventeenth century, one can
find a number of Aristotelians accepting comets as celestial objects, as
indicated by the following student theses from Jesuit colleges: Both the
form and matter of comets are celestial; thus a comet is a star, not a fire;
and Comets are celestial; in truth they are planets.83 One can even find
the successor to the two comets theory, in which both kinds of comets
are non-miraculous, in the fashion of Fromondus:
It must be said that there seem to be two kinds of comets: some are
permanent bodies placed in heaven, appearing and disappearing with
respect to us; others are only meteors produced by terrestrial exhalations,
appearing in the highest regions of air and being ignited there. Proof of
the first part. Most of the comets recently observed are certainly higher up
than the moon. Now, there cannot be any new production in this part of
heaven, as needed for the second opinion. Therefore, these are permanent
bodies.84
As all the Parisian textbook writers seem to have indicated in their own
ways, there turned out to have been no difficulty with comets being stars,
except that if they were stars, they could not have become sublunary.
As far as I can tell, no one ever suggested (nor could they have lived to
Vignes thesis: II. Coeli tres numero et specie distincti; figura rotuindi sunt; natura cor-
ruptibiles, si Empyreum excipiamus: liquidum praeterea Firmamentum. Eorum materia
est eadem sublunariu.
84 Goudin [], vol. III, p. ; , vol. , p. .
chapter six
suggest) that a comet crossed the division between the sublunary and
supralunary world. On the other hand, if a comet, seen as a star, had
a path that carried it across the celestial spheres, then a revision of the
solid eccentric-epicycle model would be called for. One might be led
to adopt a Tychonic or semi-Tychonic system on account of comets, a
path taken by many Jesuits.85 Ultimately, the Tychonic system was also
taken up as a modification of a general Aristotelian point of view. Still,
an Aristotelian would prefer the hypothesis of solid heavens, as Goudin
amply demonstrated:
It seems more probable that the heavens are solid. First objection. The
solidity of the heavens cannot be accounted for given the facts observed
recently. The improvements of the telescope and the serious studies of our
astronomers have made this hypothesis incapable of being sustained. For
example, we notice that Mars appears at times higher and at times lower
than the sun; that Venus and Mercury revolve around the sun and are at
times below it, at times above it, and at times to its side; that there are
satellites around Jupiter et de Saturn; that the sun and Jupiter rotate on
their axes, etc.
85 As late as one can find Paris writers denying the Tychonic system and defend-
ing what they called a semi-Copernican system (the earth rotating on its own axis, but not
revolving around the sunin other words, a return to the speculation of Nicole Oresme).
See Garnier . For similar kinds of arguments, using observations to conclude for
fluid heavens, see Schofield . See also Bourdin , a single volume in which two
small cosmological treatises are bound together: Sol flamma and Aphorismi analogici.
In these works, Bourdin argued that the sun is a blazing fire, a position inconsistent
with the Aristotelian theory of the heavens, as Bourdin knew quite well (pp. : auc-
tores, et argumenta sententia negantis [Aristoteles]) and supported by such innovators
as Descartes. He even referred to Descartes as someone who holds the position: novis-
sime a Renatus des Cartes solem docet esse flammam (p. ). Bourdins basic argument
is that the sun is a body on which there are sunspots and small torches, as the telescope
rendered evident. Thus the sun is corruptible matter, not incorruptible ether as Aristotle
had it (sol est corpus; in quo sunt eiusmodi maculae, et faculae, ut patet ex telescopio,
et parallaxi, quae docet haec omnia non distare a sole; ergo sol est corruptibilis, pp.
; atqui sol paret flamma (ut patet rescipiendi per telescopium; quo, ut docet Scheiner
lib. Rosa Ursina, cap. . deprehenduntur in sole multa flammae signa), pp. ).
In the Aphorismi analogici, such considerations compelled Bourdin to adopt a Tychonic
or semi-Tychonic cosmology. He moved from an explanation of sunspots on analogy
with foam bubbling up from the sea, to there being three regions of stars and planets,
to magnetic phenomena affecting both the earth and the heavens (Explicantur macu-
lae solis exemplo spumarum maris, pp. ; Distinguuntur stellae et planetae in tres
partes seu regiones, pp. ; De influxu magnetico mundi tum caelesti tum terrestri,
pp. ; De terminis fluxus magnetici mundi, pp. ). But, however, he rejected the
Copernican hypothesis, claiming that the earth stays still. (Terra quies probatur primo,
pp. ).
scholastics and the new astronomy
Reply. Saint Thomas tells us to refer to the experts with respect to such
questions; if the phenomena observed by the astronomers really do seem in
opposition to the solidity of the heavens, we would no doubt abandon our
conclusion; but in the midst of so many people who yell so loudly, we are
still allowed to listen to some very renowned astronomers, among whom is
Giovanni-Domenico Cassini, Director of the Royal Observatory, eminent
light of astronomical science, and these tell astronomers us that, until now,
none of the observed phenomena are contradicted by the hypothesis of
solid heavens.86
But Goudin, like many others in the second half of the seventeenth
century, was ultimately able to accept the hypothesis of fluid heavens:
The heavens can be fluid and continue to be incorruptible. It is not impos-
sible for a fluid body to be incorruptible: the air, water, and blood of the
Blessed after the Resurrection, as well as their vital and animal spirits, will
be fluid, in the same way that ours are now; yet they will be incorruptible.87
All the features of our discussion of comets within a late Aristotelian con-
text, suitably modified, can be recovered in a pamphlet on the comet of
, written by Jacques Grandamy, a Jesuit teaching at the College
of Clermont in Paris. Grandamy argued that comets, being located above
the moon, have to be of the same kind as the stars and other celestial
bodies; and while he acknowledged the Aristotelian tradition of comets
as sublunary exhalations, he did not give much credence to it:
The matter of this comet is celestial, the same as that of planets and stars,
since it is as celestial as they are, having been born in the heavens and
having its motion there, as we will show in what follows. However, at times,
some have seen comets in the air and lower than the moon, as some have
wanted to assert, but which I do not guarantee.88
The problem remained how to distinguish the seemingly corruptible
comet from the incorruptible celestial bodies:
But I cannot and must not give to the comet in question here, which is
born and resides in the heaven, any matter other than the one which it
has in common with the stars and the planets, which likewise have their
domain in the celestial region, with this difference, however, that the fixed
and wandering stars have been made from the beginning of the world from
a celestial matter which was liquid and fluid, and have received from their
Author a proper consistence in order to eternalize their duration and to
receive light better and to reflect it more clearly. Instead, comets are made
alteration, as the one occurring between flowing and iced water, or be-
tween milk and blood and clotted milk and blood, and finally between soft
juices and liquids and the same things when they have hardened. For it is
the same substantial form which is in the whole mass of the heaven, and
in each of its parts, solid as well as fluid; and the substance of the stars is
not different from that of the rest of heaven, in the same way that knots in
wood do not have a different matter from the rest of the wood, and metals
and diamonds and pearls have the same matter and the same substantial
form before and after their being hardened.92
Grandamys Aristotelian conclusion was reiterated in his second chapter,
De la forme de la Comete:
Therefore, in this way our comet has the same matter and the same
substantial form as the rest of heaven and all of its parts, as have the
fixed and wandering stars. In this way it is only an accidental form that
distinguishes them from the planets, and this form consists in that it is
composed of a head and of a tail and that it has a motion which is proper
to it.93
In fact, Grandamy kept the standard view of the transmission of sunlight,
that it depended upon whether the celestial body transmitting the light
was more or less rarefied; he even applied the account to the tail of
comets:
The tail is a work of light and a rough and imperfect image of the sun; for
the sun, like an excellent painter, paints its light in as many places as it has
or can bring its rays. All the rays and all the species of light are as many
images of the sun, more or less perfect, according to the diversity of the
bodies in which they are encountered, which are mirrors representing their
objects in different ways according to their diverse shapes and according to
whether they are more or less polished or more dense or more rarefied.94
Grandamy used his optical theory of comets to refute any opponent
who might have argued that comets are fiery exhalations above the sphere
of the moon, in the heavens:
In fact, there are three reasons that prove manifestly that the tail of the
comet is only the effect of the light of the sun penetrating the head of these
same comets and illuminating the heavens beyond it from behind. For first
the tail of the comet is always opposed to the sun in a direct line, the head
always being between the sun and the tail of the comet on the same line
. . . In this way one can refute the opinion of those who believe that there is
92 Grandamy , chap. , p. .
93 Grandamy , chap. , pp. .
94 Grandamy , chap. , p. .
chapter six
a fire in the heavens which forms the matter of the exhalations of comets
and their tails . . . This opinion does not explain why, in many cases, the
tails of comets are constantly opposed to the sun, nor why often they turn
in an instant from east to west.95
theory under attack and in other socio-political contexts. See Reif and ; also
Brockliss .
scholastics and the new astronomy
102 This criticism of Kuhnian change resembles that of Laudan , in which Laudan
argues that one could hold some of theory, method, or values constant and make changes
in the other; but this account is more basic, since it suggests that one can make seem-
ingly revolutionary changes in theory without any corresponding changes in method or
valuesand, in fact, that this happens fairly frequently (all in the spirit of normal sci-
ence). See Ariew .
103 In a different context Robert Desgabets, in the second half of the seventeenth
century, thinking about the various kinds of Cartesians, proposes what he calls the first
supplement to Descartes philosophy, in as much as he tries in it to correct Descartes
thoughts when it seems to [him] that Descartes has left the right path leading to the
truth; he compares it with what he calls the second supplement, the new application
of Descartes incontestable principles to phenomena he had not known, or to truths he
had not spoken of, what Cartesians such as Cordemoy, Rohault, de la Forge, Clauberg,
and others have done (Desgabets , p. ). The two kinds of Cartesians map very well
into two kinds of normal scientists: the second supplement type looks like a Kuhnian
normal scientist; the first supplement type is the non-Kuhnian normal scientist in the
mode of du Chevreul, Bouju, Fromondus, et al.
chapter six
some false theories about solar and lunar spots and comets. True, but
it is not obvious that they should have done otherwise. The evidence
for radical change was not clear without hindsight. As we have already
pointed out, even Galileo maintained a roughly Aristotelian theory of
comets as sublunary events. Moreover, Descartes, who did break from
the traditional view of comets, placing them in the heavens and accepting
their generation and corruption, also held a false view of them as very
hard, fast moving, massive bodies.104
Taken in a piecemeal fashion, the Aristotelian system appears to have
been rich enough to have been able to provide explanations for the
various astronomical novelties: Aristotelian science in the seventeenth
century was much like an organism, living and adapting. Descartes pro-
vided another complete system to compete with it;105 soon Gassendi
104 Ren Descartes, Le Monde, chap. , and Principia Philosophia III, art. .
105 On the need to provide complete explanations and not to try to explain phe-
nomena piecemealthat is to say, concerning Descartes criticism of Galileos scientific
methodologysee Ariew . A side issue about the relations between Descartes and
Galileo: It is clear that Descartes had significant philosophical differences with Galileo,
both with respect to his method and its resultant theories. Descartes notoriously said of
Galileo concerning the Two New Sciences:
I find that he philosophizes much more ably than common people insofar as he
avoids as much as possible the errors of the Schools, and tries to examine physical
matters by means of mathematical reasons. In that I entirely agree with him, and
hold that there is no other way to discover the truth. But it seems to me that he is
greatly deficient in that he digresses continually and does not stop to explain fully
a subject; this shows that he has not examined them in orderly fashion, and has
sought for the reasons of some particular effects without having considered the
first causes of nature, and thus, he has built without foundation. (AT II, )
Descartes is often taken to task for not showing sufficient deference or not appreciating
Galileos greatness. Such critiques usually miss the large element of contingency and
possible misunderstanding in the relations between the two thinkers. Descartes had
already said something similar with respect to the Two Chief World Systems:
I find that he philosophizes well enough on motion, though there is very little he
has to say about it that I find entirely true. As far as I could see, he goes wrong
more often when following received opinion than when going beyond it, with
the exception of his discussion of the ebb and flow of the tides, where I find his
reasoning rather forced. (AT I, p. )
Descartes was in the position to make this assessment of Galileos natural philosophy
because, as he divulged in the same letter, Beeckman came here on Saturday evening
and lent me the book by Galileo. But he took it away with him to Dordrecht this
morning; so I have only had it in my hands for thirty hours. I was able to leaf through
the whole book (ibid.). We assume that Descartes had access to Galileos works and
that he would know about as much concerning Galileo as we do. But Descartes letters
impart a different impression. Before his notorious pronouncements on Galileos Two
scholastics and the new astronomy
and Hobbes would do the same and a battle for supremacy would be
waged among the various creatures.
New Sciences, Descartes had refused to comment about the work simply because he had
not read it: Your last letter just contains observations on Galileos book, to which I cannot
reply, because I have not yet seen it; but as soon as it is available for sale, I will look at
it, if only to be able to send you my copy with my annotations, if that would be worth
doing, or at least to send you my observations (AT II, ). It took a few more months
before Descartes was able to read the book (see AT II, and ). Later, responding to
an accusation that he had borrowed some of Galileos ideas, Descartes said: concerning
Galileo, let me say that I have never met him, and have had no communications with
him, and consequently I could not have borrowed anything from him. Moreover, I see
nothing in his books that gives me cause to be envious, and hardly anything I would wish
to acknowledge as my own. The best part [of his work] is what he has to say on music
(AT II, ). We can see yet another element of muddle and miscommunication in
Descartes statement that what is best about Galileo has to do with what he says about
music. It looks as though Descartes confused Galileo with his father Vincenzo (
), a noted musical theorist. This would account for Descartes puzzlement about
Galileos great longevity: You write about Galileo as if he were still alive and I thought
that he was long dead (AT III, ).
chapter seven
1 Aubrey , vol. , p. .
2 Bouillier, , vol. , p. . It seems to be his opinion, though he puts it forward
as Baillets; he quotes Baillet, who wrote: Ce n est pas que M. Descartes ne prit toutes
les mesures possibles pour se dispenser de jamais remuer la matiere qui concerne la
transsubstantiation au Sacrement de l Eucharistie, parce qu il la regardoit comme une
question de pure Thologie, et comme un mystere que Dieu nous propose de croire sans
nous obliger a l examiner. Mais, depuis que M. Arnauld luy en fait l objection, comme au
nom des Thologiens Scholastiques, il ne luy fut plus libre de demeurer dans son silence,
Baillet , vol. II, p. .
chapter seven
have been desirable for Descartes to have recognized in good faith and
steadfastly the moral impossibility in which all philosophers will always
be, of demonstrating transubstantiation using the principles of physics,
or that he would have had the strength to keep a perpetual silence on this
point, not attempting to plumb the depths of so inexplicable a mystery.3
In a recent article, Nicholas Jolley echoes: instead of contenting himself
with saying that the dogma [of transubstantiation] was a mystery that
must simply be accepted on faith, Descartes attempted to explain it in
terms of his own philosophy. Descartes possibly misguided efforts were
to be taken up by his overzealous disciples.4
As evidence for the general view, one may cite the alleged fact that
Descartes issued different explanations of transubstantiation, suggesting
that he was constructing his explanations as he went along; for instance,
Richard Watson counts three separate theories of transubstantiation: the
first in Descartes Reply to Arnauld, the second, which turns out to be
an explanation of transubstantiation completely different from the one
he gives to Arnauld, in his letters to Denis Mesland, and the third when,
not remaining long satisfied that [the second theory] alone is adequate,
Descartes, in a later letter to Clerselier, combines his first with his
second theory.5 Also adduced as evidence is the fact that churchmen who
accepted Descartes explanation got into trouble with Church authorities
(as if they and Descartes were doing something wrong). Bouillier asserts:
A small time after this letter [on transubstantiation], Father Mesland
was sent to the missions to tend to the savages, perhaps because of his
overly ardent taste for the new philosophy . . . 6 And Watson tells us more
forcefully that the exchange of letters [between Descartes and Mesland]
began in and was terminated abruptly in when, as extreme
discipline for his commerce with Descartes, Mesland was banished to
Canada.7 He even asks Why was Mesland dealt with so severely? and
he answers Undoubtedly it was for the same reasons that led Descartes
Mesland makes the same point: Ce Pere fut relegu en Canada, ou il est mort, cause de
la trop grande relation qu il auoit avec Mr Des Cartes. See AT IV, .
7 Watson , p. and Watson in Lennon, Nicholas, and Davis , p. .
Watson adds that Mesland died on the Canadian mission in without, as far as is
known, inquiring further into transubstantiation.
descartes and the jesuits of la flche
vol. II, p. ).
12 See Ariew , p. ; trans. in ACS p. .
13 Babin , pp. , .
chapter seven
and .
22 They were not actually published until the nineteenth century, first in Descartes
tine Dom Antoine Vinot advised Clerselier not to correspond with the Jesuit Jean Berthet
Pour vous parler donc, Monsieur, avec toute la sincrit d un vritable ami, de votre com-
merce avec le Pre Bertet Jsuite, je crois que vous ne pouviez donner une atteinte plus
mortelle la Philosophie de Monsieur Descartes, ni la rputation de sa personne, qu en
communiquant vos penses et vos crits sur la matire de l Eucharistie ces gens-l.
Agostini , vol. , p. . See also Nadler , esp. p. .
23 AT IV, . In the next letter, Descartes suggests Vous ferez de ma lettre ce qu il
vous plaira, et pource qu elle ne vaut pas la peine d estre garde, ie vous prie seulement
de la rompre, sans prendre la peine de me la renvoyer, AT IV, .
24 conjecturas autem meas viva voce malim exponere, quam scriptis, AT V, .
25 Gouhier and Armogathe . Sortais and can be seen as an early
[Saint Thomas] truly agrees that God can make an accident subsist in
nature outside its subject, in the same way that all genuine Christians
believe that all the accidents of the bread are without the bread in the Holy
Sacrament of the Eucharist, and the accidents of the wine are without the
wine, even though it seems that there is a greater incompatibility in this
than in having matter subsist without form, insofar as matter does not
need any subject or support, being itself the subject and support of all other
natural things, and accidents cannot naturally subsist without subjects.31
We can see the same line of argument in later textbooks. For example,
Ren de Ceriziers argues, in Le philosophe franais, that there can be no
form without matter and no matter without form naturally, but he adds,
however, one must not deny that God can conserve matter without any
form, since these are two beings that can be distinguished, that no more
depend upon one another than accident on substance, the former being
separated from the latter in the Eucharist.32
Such discussions were especially frequent in the commentaries on
Aristotles Physics concerning matter, form, place, time, and void. We
have just seen the Eucharist invoked by Dupleix and de Ceriziers in their
discussions of matter, and by various authorities in Paris in their censure
of the rejection of substantial form. We can also see Dupleix arguing,
in his discussion of place, that supernaturally two bodies can be in the
same place, and that, given the sacrament of the Eucharist, one body can
be in two places.33 This is a common discussion in early seventeenth-
century philosophy textbooks. Both of the questionswhether one body
can occupy two places and whether two bodies can occupy one place
are answered affirmatively, given the Eucharist, by the Jesuits of the
University of Coimbra and by Charles d Abra de Raconis.34 Another
31 Dupleix , pp. .
32 De Ceriziers , chap. , pp. .
33 Pour le regard de l autre question, savoir-non si un corps peut estre en divers
lieux en mesme temps, je croy que naturellement cela ne se peut faire non plus que
plusieurs corps ne se peuvvent trouver en mesme temps en un mesme lieu: mais que
par la toute-puissance de Dieu l un se peut aussi bien que l autre: je dy que Dieu peut
tout les deux: et par ainsi (puis qu il l a voulu et l a dit) que le corps de son fils est en
tous les sacremens de la sainct sacre Eucharistie, et en chaque petite piece d iceux. De
Ceriziers , pp. .
34 Conimbricences , lib. , cap. , quaest , art. : certum esse posse duo corpora
virtute divina eodem loco simul existere, and quaest. ; Utrum idem corpus simul in
duobus loci divina virtute esse queat, art. : solutio quaestionis, esp. pp. , (though
their account is a strange hybrid of Thomism and Scotism); de Raconis , Tertia
pars, Physica, Tractatus secundus, de loco, ad quartum librum physicorum, quaest. :
An plura loca idem numero corpus capere possint, seu an idem numero corpus possit
chapter seven
The inescapable conclusion is that, at least during the first half of the sev-
enteenth century, it was the common practice of Catholic philosophers
when they were theorizing about natural philosophy to discuss the com-
esse in pluribus locis, quaest : An duo vel plura corpora possint esse in eodem loco per
penetratione, esp. pp. , .
35 Eustachius a Sancto Paulo , Physica, Pars I, tract. , disp. , quaest. : An duo
chius and Abra de Raconis, and To Mersenne, March , AT III for the first
mention of the replies to Arnauld.
41 See AT III, ; see also chapter .
42 AT I, , , , .
43 AT III, , , , , , , , ,
and VII, .
44 III, , IV, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , .
chapter seven
omnino profiteor nihil ad religionem pertinere, quod non aeque ac etiam magis facile
explicetur per mea principia, quam per ea quae vulgo recepta sunt he then refers to his
striking example of this at the end of Responsiones IV, and adds that he would be ready
to do the same for any other topic, if needs be; AT VII, .
descartes and the jesuits of la flche
50 AT I, .
51 To Mersenne, novembre , AT I, .
52 AT III, .
chapter seven
53 J approve fort que vous auez retranch ce que i auois mis la fin de ma Rponse
M. Arnauld, principalement si cela peut nous aider obtenir une approbation, AT III,
.
54 AT III, .
55 See AT III, , in which Descartes tells Huygens that the second edition of the
Meditationes is plus correcte que celle de Paris, et mesme un peu plus ample, princi-
palement en la fin de ma response aux quatriesmes obiections, ou ie me suis emancip
d escrire que l opinion commune de nos Theologiens touchant l Eucharistie n est pas
aussi orthodoxe que la mienne, ce que le pere Mercenne auvoit retranch pour ne pas
deplaire nos Docteurs. See also Armogathe .
56 AT VII, . See also Stephen Menns article, The Greatest Stumbling Block:
In the case of a human body, it remains the same through changes of mat-
ter, on account of its union with a soul: they are eadem numero [numeri-
cally the same], only because they are informed by the same soul.65 Thus,
humans naturally transubstantiate other matter by incorporating it and
60 AT VII, .
61 May , AT IV, . See also AT IV, .
62 AT IV, .
63 February , AT IV, .
64 AT IV, .
65 AT IV, .
chapter seven
66 AT IV, .
67 AT IV, . See also To Mesland, or , AT IV, and To Clerse-
lier, March , AT IV, . Clearly, an explanation of how any object affects our
senses is still an explanation in the realm of philosophy, for Descartes; so is an explanation
of the principle of individuation for bodies (and natural transubstantiation). However,
when Descartes explains transubstantiation as a supernatural phenomenon, he is enter-
ing into the realm of theology.
68 Aquinas , Pars III, quaest. : quia impossibile est quod unus motus
ejusdem corporis localiter moti terminetur simul diversa loca; see also Aquinas
, IV, chap. . For Thomas denying that one body can be in two places, see Aquinas
, Pars IIIa, quaest. and , Quodlibeta I, art. , Physica IV, lect. and
Metaphysica III, lect. .
69 Scotus , Quaestiones quodlibetales, quaest. , art. .
70 This was pointed out in the seventeenth century: Ce que je trouve de plaisant,
c est que Descartes enseigne hardiment des conclusions trs dangereuses, qu il tire de
deux principes qui ne sont point prouvez. Le premier principe qu il suppose, est que
descartes and the jesuits of la flche
the explanations of the Eucharist) against various attacks, in the latter half of the seven-
teenth century.
76 See Gregor Sebba, Adrien Baillet and the Genesis of His Vie de M. Des-cartes, in
for the whole affair is to think that Descartes was attempting to enlist
the Jesuits as teachers of his philosophy and making a genuine attempt
to establish his philosophy as a new Catholic philosophy to replace the
Aristotelianwith all that this entails. Together with the Principles of Phi-
losophy, Descartes correspondence with Mesland constitutes a first step
towards a Cartesian scholasticism.79
Armour ; both provide basic data to counter the standard misinformation about
Mesland (especially that of the Bibliothque de la Compagnie de Jsus which confuses
Denis Mesland with Pierre Mesland, who also taught at La Flche and who died before
the exchange of letters with Descartes).
79 In this respect, see, in particular, Descartes letter A un reverend Pere Iesuite
ation and the criterion of identity that allows one to accept the real presence of Christ
in the consecrated host. The pense is clearly a criticism of the February , letter
Descartes wrote to Mesland about the Eucharist:
It is, in its idiom, wholly the body of Jesus Christ, but it cannot be said to be the
whole body of Jesus Christ.
The union of two things without change does not enable us to say that one becomes
the other.
In this way the soul is united to the body, and the fire to the wood, without change.
But change is needed to make the form of the one become the form of the other.
Thus the union of the Word to mankind.
chapter seven
Because my body without my soul would not constitute the body of a man, then
my soul united to any matter whatsoever will constitute my body.
This does not distinguish the necessary condition from the sufficient condition.
The union is necessary, but not sufficient.
The left arm is not the right.
Impenetrability is a property of matter.
Numerical (de numero) identity with respect to the same time requires the identity
of matter.
Thus, if God united my soul to a body in China, the same body numerically the
same (idem numero) would be in China.
The same river that runs there is numerically the same (idem numero) as the one
running at the same time in China. (Pascal , pp. )
81 For a substantial portion of the history of this extremely complex subject, see Bakker
83 There is a further complication I will disregard, in that Leibniz states that Idea est
unio Dei cum creaturaThe idea is the union of God with creature, Leibniz , VI.,
p. ; Leibniz , p. .
84 Leibniz , VI., pp. . For more on Leibnizs essay on transubstan-
footnote to the passage he wrote: Leibnizs departures from Thomism are significant;
his view of individuality and of the soul here is Scotistic, though he had earlier rejected
Scotus principle of individuality. The unity of matter as an aggregate is never itself
material but logical and mental. The soul itself, in turn, has its own matter, distinct from
its body (Leibniz , p. ). Loemker was right in thinking of the view as a kind of
Scotism, even though, of course, it says nothing about individuals as common nature plus
haecceity, two things asserted to be formally distinct.
88 Leibniz , VI., p. ; Leibniz , p. .
89 Descartes and Leibniz both treat the soul as a substantial form and use it as the
principle of individuation for informed matter, though, of course, Leibniz extends the
principle to all thingsincluding what Descartes would have considered inert matter
not just to human bodies.
90 See the Letter to Foucher, Leibniz , II., pp. , trans in Leibniz ,
pp. .
91 In the Metaphysical Disputation, Leibniz, as expected, followed the path traced
out by Jakob Thomasius, his professor at Leipzig. He set aside Thomas solution as not
furnishing a single principle of individuation for both material and immaterial substances
and discussed four other possible solutions to the problem, rejecting three of them,
descartes and the jesuits of la flche
including the Scotist answer, haecceity, defending as best the whole entity principle
of the nominalists, that is, matter and form. For more on Leibnizs principle of
individuation, see Ariew .
92 Discours de la metaphysique () . Leibniz , VI.b, p. ; Leibniz
, IV, ; Leibniz , .
93 Discours de la metaphysique .
94 Discours de la metaphysique . Leibniz , VI.b, p. .
chapter seven
is extensive. For a discussion of bodies being individuated by their motion, see Garber
, pp. .
chapter seven
CONDEMNATIONS OF CARTESIANISM:
THE EXTENSION AND UNITY OF THE UNIVERSE
Descartes made some converts to his new philosophy with the publica-
tion of the Principles, the systematic exposition of his thought, set out
in scholastic style, but, on the whole, he did not succeed in getting the
work adopted in the curriculum of the schools. Here and there, one
can find Cartesian principles taught, as with the ill-fated Oratorians at
Angers in the s and Edmond Pourchot at Paris in the s. One
can also find Cartesian propositions included in some disputations, but
the discussion is mostly negative. For most of the seventeenth century,
the official response to Descartes philosophy was unfavorable. At various
times, Descartes waged fierce battles with his opponents. In the s,
he thought himself at war with the Jesuits.1 And there were troubles and
official condemnations by Protestants at Utrecht around and at Ley-
den in .2 The battles continued and intensified after Descartes death
in . There were condemnations by Catholics at Louvain in ,3
culminating with Descartes works being put on the Index of Prohibited
Books by the censors of Rome in .4 The fighting raged in the sec-
ond half of the seventeenth century: the Jesuits held more anti-Cartesian
disputations at Clermont College in , some clearly intended to make
Descartes look ridiculous.5 It intensified with numerous attacks in print.6
The Cartesians counter-attacked with satires7 and learned essays.8 The
anti-Cartesians also responded with their own satires.9 Ultimately, the
1 See chapter .
2 Verbeck .
3 D Argentr , pt. II, pp. .
4 Bouillier , vol. I, pp. .
5 Prou .
6 See Vincent , de la Ville [Louis le Valois] , de la Grange , and Huet
.
7 See the arret burlesque, Boileau , vol. , pp. ; Murr , pp. .
8 [Antoine Arnauld?], Plusieurs raisons pour empecher la censure ou la condemnation
dispute spilled into the official political arena, the domains of the King,
of the Universities, and of the teaching orders: The King issued an edict
in ;10 the faculty of arts at Paris tried to condemn Cartesianism in
and succeeded in ;11 there were skirmishes at Angers and Caen
during ;12 the Jesuits, in a Congress with the Oratorians, ulti-
mately prohibited the teaching of Cartesianism in ,13 and formally
condemned it in .14
The official condemnations of Cartesianism of the late seventeenth
century were unusually frequent and ferocious. Only the condemnations
of Aristotelianism in the thirteenth century seem to have been as fre-
quent and as wide-sweeping; however, the reasons for the prohibitions
of Cartesianism were even more diverse than those given against Peri-
patetic philosophy. Cartesianism was censured not only for doctrinal
reasons, but also on pragmatic and pedagogical grounds. Reflecting the
pedagogical judgment of the authorities of Utrecht, it was often asserted
that being taught Cartesian philosophy would leave one unprepared for
the higher faculties of theology, law, and medicine.15 And the Jesuits,
echoing Pierre Bourdins preoccupation with hyperbolic doubt, usually
gave pragmatic reasons for dispensing with Cartesianism. This view can
be captured nicely by the following comment by Ren Rapin: In truth,
Descartes teaches one to doubt too much, and that is not a good model
for minds who are naturally credulous; but, in the end, he is more origi-
nal than the others.16 A general assessment of the doctrinal difficulties of
Cartesianism can be found in a summary of a disputation by the Jesuits
of Clermont College during :
To say no more, the Cartesian hypothesis must be distasteful to mathe-
matics, philosophy, and theology. To philosophy because it overthrows all
its principles and ideas which commonsense has accepted for centuries;
10 Bouillier , vol. I, p. .
11 D Argentr , pt. I, p. .
12 For an account of the events at Angers, see Babin .
13 Concordat entre les Jesuites et les Peres de l Oratoire, Actes de la Sixime Assemble,
qu il faut douter de toutes choses, c est un principe qui tend l athisme . . . ou du moins
l hrsie des manichens; cf. also the condemnations of and , propositions
(Ariew , p. ; trans in ACS p. ). For the textbook critiques, see Vincent ,
pp. , and Duhamel , pp. .
condemnations of cartesianism
This summary is broken down into three main categories: the first, a com-
plaint already issued at Utrecht, is the rejection of any novel philosophy.
Descartes had previously attempted to defend himself against that charge
by arguing (unsuccessfully, it seems) that his philosophy was not novel,
but the oldest of all philosophies, since he only accepted principles that
had been generally admitted by all philosophers.18 The second refers to
the scholastic doctrine of the classification of the sciences. The claim is
that mathematics should be subalternated to physics and not vice-versa,
as with Descartes. Finally, the third is itself divided into three parts, all
concerning the relations between philosophy and theology. Cartesian
philosophy is unfairly linked with atomism and the standard complaint
against atomism is issued against it.19 The disputants also object that, for
principes des choses suivant Leucippe, Democrite et Descartes, and art. : Expos de la
doctrine de Descartes sur les principes. . Opinion de Descartes sur les principes des
choses . Les molecules de Descartes ne peuvent tre les principes des choses.
chapter eight
20 Letter to Regius, mid-December , AT, III, and Letter to Dinet, AT, VII,
.
21 Ariew , p. ; trans. in ACS p. . In their article, Armogathe and Carraud
show, as previously suspected, that the Louvain condemnations were the catalyst for
having Descartes works put on the Index in .
22 Descartes, AT, VIII, ; CSM vol. I, p. .
condemnations of cartesianism
of matter and body and repeated criticisms of the consequence that ani-
mals are machines lacking sensation and knowledge; these spanned such
diverse thinkers as the Scotist Claudius Frassen and the Oratorian Jean-
Baptiste de la Grange, among others.23 Ultimately, the Jesuits condemned
the proposition that Animals are mere automata deprived of all knowl-
edge and sensation.24
The rejection of substantial forms or real accidents. Here the reference
was to Replies Six, sec. , where Descartes stated:
It is completely contradictory that there should be real accidents, since
whatever is real can exist separately from any other subject; yet anything
that can exist separately in this way is a substance, not an accident. The
claim that real accidents cannot be separated from their subjects naturally,
but only by the power of God, is irrelevant. For to occur naturally is
nothing other than to occur through the ordinary power of God, which in
no way differs from his extraordinary powerthe effect on the real world
is exactly the same. Hence if everything which can naturally exist without
a subject is a substance, anything that can exist without a substance even
through the power of God, however extraordinary, should also be termed
a substance.25
The objection was that, as a consequence, the accidents of bread and wine
would not remain without subject in the Eucharist. This was surely the
most frequently repeated criticism of Cartesianism. As we have said, Ora-
torians and Jesuits required their professors to teach that in each nat-
ural body there is a substantial form really distinct from matter, and
there are real and absolute accidents inherent in their subjects, which
can supernaturally be without any subjects.26 And at Angers, the Orato-
rians Fromentier, Lamy, and Villecroze were removed from their teach-
ing positions for having taught the Cartesians doctrine that there are
no species or real accidents in the Eucharist.27 The Jesuits condemned
the propositions: There are no substantial forms of bodies in mat-
ter, and There are no absolute accidents.28 Most textbooks contained
veulent pas se servir de ce mot d infiny, qui seroit trop odieux, mais seulement de celuy
d indefiny qui est la mme chose, et qui n ajoute qu une seule syllabe tout ce que nous
disons de l infiny.
37 Ariew , p. ; trans. in ACS p. .
38 De la Grange , vol. I, c. de la nature du lieu et du vide [] que le monde
est infini, qu il n y a point d espaces vuide au de-la des cieux, et que plusieurs mondes
condemnations of cartesianism
vol. , p. .
43 Descartes, AT, VIII, ; CSM I, pp. .
44 Ariew , p. ; trans. in ACS p. .
45 Ariew , p. ; trans. in ACS p. .
chapter eight
46 See chapter .
47 Physics b.
48 See Duhem , chap. .
49 For example, De Ceriziers , vol. , pp. .
50 De Ceriziers , vol. , p. .
51 De Ceriziers , vol. , pp. . Compare with Lonard Marands remarkably
The scholastic denial of the void is therefore less categorical than its
Peripatetic counterpart.
Descartes actually hardened the position, looking more like Aristotle
than the scholastics. He argued for the impossibility of empty space, both
in and out of the world. Thinking of a vessel, its concave shape, and
the extension that must be contained in this concavity, he asserted: it
would be as contradictory of us to conceive of a mountain without a
valley, as to conceive of this concavity without the extension contained
in it, or of this extension without an extended substance.52 In fact, he
argued that if God were to remove the body contained in that vessel
and did not allow anything else to take its place, the sides of the vessel
would thereby become contiguous. Scholastics such as Jean Duhamel
took on Descartes actual argument: God can absolutely destroy the
bodies presently between the heavens and earth, having produced them
and conserving them freely . . . God could put a third body between them
without displacing them . . . and, as a consequence, heaven and earth
would not be touching truly and effectively.53
What is curious about all this is the feeling of dj-vu for anyone
with the slightest knowledge of the history of condemnations. Most
of the difficulties with Cartesianism in the seventeenth century were
previously difficulties with Aristotelianism in the thirteenth. Among the
propositions condemned at the University of Paris in were some
that were seen as threatening to the Eucharist; prohibited, for example,
Ceux qui sont persuadez que la succession necessaire pour mouvoir et porter un
corps d un lieu en un autre, procedoit de la seule resistance de l air, qui comme une
grande mer dans laquelle nous flottons ainsi que les poissons, ne permet pas qu un
corps solide dans un seul moment se puisse acheminer d une extremit une autre;
ont estim qu il ne se pourrait faire de mouvement dans un espace vuide, suppos
que la nature en cecy se voulut accorder avec notre hypothese et nous fournir de
quoy en faire l experience. Aristote mesme a est de cette opinion.
Mais parce que la succession requise pour le mouvement ne procede pas seulement
de la resistance de l air; mais aussi de la distance et de l esloignement qui se trouve
entre l une et l autre de ces extremitez supposes, de l vient que suppos le vuide
dans la nature, rien ne pourroit empescher le mouvement d un corps d un lieu
un autre. (pp. )
52 Principles II, art. .
53 Duhamel , chap. , si le vide des philosophes est impossible, p. , and ,
vol. , p. , vacuum divinitus possibile est. Cf. also Frassen , Cartesius contendit,
non solum nullum vacuum existere; sec nec etiam divinitus esse possibile, p. ; de la
Grange , chap. , si le vide est possible, pp. ; and Vincent , de vacuo
philosophico, p. .
chapter eight
Perhaps Descartes and his contemporaries were unaware of the long his-
tory of these prohibitions. When we think of the condemnation of ,
we bring to mind a set of different censured propositions, ranging
over a great many topics, attached to a preface. The preface denounces
unnamed students who raise heretical issues to which they claim they are
not to able to respond. The preface continues with an attack on the doc-
trine of double truthsFor they say that these things are true according
to philosophy but not according to the Catholic faith, as if there were two
contrary truthsapparently aimed at unnamed Averroists, meaning,
in this context, some radical Aristotelians, presumably Siger de Brabant
and Boethius of Dacia. The preface also specifically condemns the book
De Amore, on courtly love, and books of geomancy and necromancy, for-
tune telling and sorcery. We may also bring to mind that the condemna-
tion was issued shortly after the death of Thomas Aquinas and constituted
an attempt by some conservative (Augustinian) theologians to stem the
tide of what they considered to be overly naturalistic (Aristotelian) philo-
sophical accounts, such as those of Aquinas, that they believed might
have infringed too much on theological matters.
Indeed, such an account takes center stage in Stephen Gaukrogers
The Emergence of a Scientific Culture: Science and the Shaping of Moder-
nity . Gaukroger uses the condemnations of as an instru-
ment that undercuts the Thomist solution of using metaphysics as the
56 Weisheipl , pp. .
chapter eight
57 As Weisheipl says, One typical proposition condemned was the statement God
cannot move the heavens in a straight line, for then there would be a vacuum (prop. ).
The author of the condemnation maintained that God could do both, move the heavens
in a straight line and create a vacuum! (, p. ).
58 Aquinas , II.I, q. , art. ; q. , art. ; and q. , art. .
59 As Edward Grant points out, Aquinas was sometimes seen as defending the possi-
bility of motion in the void and sometimes seen as prohibiting it; on one occasion he is
seen as doing both; see , p. n.
60 Etienne Gilson aptly says, The list of the Thomistic propositions involved in the
since Rigord died in , though the history goes up through ; it was published in
Historiae Francorum ab Anno Christi DCCCC ad Ann. M.CC.LXXXV scriptores veteres XI
(Frankfurt, ). There was another edition of the Gesta in and a French translation
with the continuation after by Guillaume le Breton in . The one paragraph (in
the continuation) that is interesting is from p. :
At that time [] the works of Metaphysics said to be composed by Aristotle
were being read in Paris. They had recently been brought from Constantinople
and translated from the Greek into Latin. Since, not only did they give rise to the
said heresy [of Almaric] through subtle maxims, but they could still engender new
heresies, the books were ordered to be burned and the same council [of Paris]
prohibited them, under pain of excommunication, from ever being transcribed,
read, or defended, in any fashion whatsoever.
Almarics male followers were rounded up and burned at the stake; since Almaric had
died a few years earlier, his bones were disinterred, burned, and their ashes were thrown
away.
chapter eight
excellent treatment of the criticism leveled at Duhem for this claim, see Murdoch, ,
pp. , esp. pp. .
71 John Hennon in Duhem , p. .
condemnations of cartesianism
72 For more on what is clearly an important event in the first half of the seventeenth
Let us recall that Mersenne also advised Descartes not to publish the end of Replies IV
to Arnauld, dealing with the Eucharist; Descartes accepted his advice for the first edition
(Paris, ), but published the full text a year later, in the second edition (Amsterdam,
).
78 Gassendi , II, exer. , art. : Species Eucharisticas non item fore Fides nos
Orthodoxa docet.
condemnations of cartesianism
the size which it can potentially be it can actually be. Hence, since no
sensible magnitude is infinite, it is impossible to exceed every assigned
magnitude; for if it were possible, there would be something bigger than
the heavens.81 Thus, Aristotles physical world is finite and cannot grow,
but in that world magnitude is continuous (or indefinitely divisible) and
time and generation are unending (or extendible indefinitely).
The standard scholastic terminology for dealing with the problems of
infinity was imported from logic. Logicians distinguished between cat-
egorematic terms and syncategorematic terms, or terms that have a sig-
nification by themselves, and terms that do not (cosignificative terms).
Examples of the first kind are substantival names and verbs, and exam-
ples of the second kind are adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, and prepo-
sitions.82 The distinction is applied to infinity to yield both a categore-
matic and syncategorematic infinite: The phrase infinitely many is both
syncategorematic and categorematic, for it can indicate an infinite plural-
ity belonging to its substance either absolutely or in respect to its pred-
icate.83 One can then define the two kinds of infinite separately; syn-
categorematic infinite may be defined as for any number or magnitude
there is a greater and categorematic infinite as greater than any num-
ber or magnitude, no matter how great.84 With the distinction one can
solve logical puzzles, since it may be true that something is infinite, taken
syncategorematically, and false that something is infinite, taken categore-
matically.85 It also enables one to ask separately whether there are syncat-
egorematic and/or categorematic infinites in nature, without worrying
about potentialities. Naturally, various scholastics took differing views
with respect to the existence of various infinites, and often disagreed
with Aristotles doctrines. It is not difficult to see why this should be so,
given that portions of Aristotles doctrine about infinity are clearly in con-
flict with the conception of an absolutely omnipotent God who is a cre-
ator. The standard doctrine (or correction of Aristotle) was the denial of
chap. .
85 For example: I would agree with this [syncategorematic] proposition: along all the
parts, a spiral line is drawn; and I would not agree with this [categorematic] proposition:
a spiral line is drawn along all the parts, Buridan , fol. , col. c.
condemnations of cartesianism
tione, ut Zabarella loquitur. Ab infinito in potentia, ad infinitum actu nulla est consecutio.
Categorematice: Actu. Haec immensitas non potest communicari ulli creaturae, p. .
87 The condemnation of various propositions in influenced the discussions of the
Toletus treats such topics as the categorematic infinite, division into pro-
portional parts, and the question whether a body can be actually infi-
nite,88 but he affirms a generally conservative position. On the other
hand, he does refer his readers to Albert of Saxonys more daring posi-
tion: Alber. Saxo. hoc lib. q. .89 Roughly the same can be said about
the Coimbrans90 and Abra de Raconis, except that de Raconis gives spe-
cific citations to William of Ockham and Gregory of Rimini: Prior est
Ochami in . qu. & quodlibeto . q. Greg. Ariminensis in . dist. .
q. & aliorum per divinam potentiam infinitum actu categorematicum
posse creari.91 According to L.W.B. Brockliss, there was a schoolman
du Chevreul, Professor at Paris in the s and swho taught that
Aquinas was wrong to deny that God could create an infinite body.92
Eustachius a Sancto Paulos doctrine seems to differ significantly from
the standard view, so it is worth detailing. It looks as if Eustachius
thinks of syncategorematic infinite as a species of infinite in act. In his
. . . Que s il y avait un corps infiny selon toutes les dimensions, il seroit seul en
l univers, car il occuperoit tout le lieu; ce que nous scavons estre faux, y ayant
plusieurs corps de diverse nature. Quant la quantite discontinue il ne se trouve
point d infinie aussi. Car si elle estoit, ce seroit une certaine multitude nombrable
ou innombrable . . .
L infiny en quelque sorte dont nous venons de parler, ne se trouve point non seule-
ment en acte, mais aussi en puissance: car s il se trouvoit en puissance passive il
pourrait estre reduict en acte, attendu que la nature ne faict rien en vain: ou si
c estait en puissance objective ou active, c est dire en la puissance de l agent,
Dieu pour le moin le pourrait produire puis qu il n envelopperoit point de con-
tradiction. Mais cela ne peut estre: car Dieu ne pouvant rien faire d avantage que
l infiny, il ne pourrait rien faire apres qu il l auroit fait: et partant sa puissance seroit
moindre qu auparavant, voire nulle de tout, puisqu il ne pourrait rien faire apres
l infiny: ce qui est tres absurd: attendu qu elle ne se diminue, ny ne s augmente, ny
ne peut estre epuisee s choses qu elle faict hors de soy. Davantage puisque la puis-
sance de Dieu est infinie, comme nous le montrerons ailleurs, il ne la sauroit finit
par quelqu une de ses oeuvres. Et partant il n en peut faire de si grande qu il n en
puisse faire encores une plus grande, autrement la puissance de Dieu serait limitee
par ce qui procederoit d elle mesme. C est pourquoi on dit que Dieu a l infinite
de puissance, mais non la puissance d infinit, c est dire qu encores que sa puis-
sance soit infinie, qu il ne scauroit faire aucune chose infinie: scavoir distincte de
son essence,
Bouju , vol. I, pp. (chap. LXXXVI: De l estant finy et de l infiny)
88 Toletus , III, quaest. vvii, fol. , col. a to fol. , col. d.
89 Toletus , fol. , col. a.
90 Conimbricenses , Physics vol. I, col. , especially col. .
91 Abra de Raconis , pars III, p. . De Raconis is incorrect in attributing the
Physics, tract. III, question , What and in what way is something infinite,
Eustachius divides the infinite into infinite in actuality and potential
infinite. He then divides the former into categorematic actual infinite and
syncategorematic actual infinite, depending upon whether all the parts
of a given infinite are actually separated or not. Infinites whose parts are
not all in actuality are of three kinds: infinite in succession, addition, and
subtraction.93
Eustachius does think that the continuum is divisible into infinite
parts. But, in the final analysis, his doctrinal deviations from the standard
view are more cosmetic than real. Eustachius argues that the continuum
is not divisible by equal magnitudes; it is divisible by equal proportional
parts (or by parts whose magnitudes diminish by halves). Thus it is
infinitely divisible successively, and not simultaneously. The continuum
is divisible to infinity not so that there can exist simultaneously actually
separated infinite parts, but so that one can progress in the division:
If you object that it follows that if one has to posit an actual infinity in
nature, it would follow that either one can divide a continuum into infinite
parts or those parts in the continuum would not be actually infinite,
we reply, infinity in act can be conceived in two ways: one, properly
speaking, in which all the parts are actually separated and distinct from
one another, which is called categorematic infinite; the other in truth,
improperly speaking, whose parts are not actually separated from one
another, but are said to be communicating with one another, in which
the smaller are contained in the larger, which is called syncategorematic
infinite. Thus a continuum can be divided to infinity and it does not
follow that we have to hold an actual infinity, properly speaking, but only
an infinite in act in the second way, improperly speaking. From this it
is to be understood that all parts of the continuum are actually in the
continuum, not however actually infinite categorematically and properly,
but syncategorematically and improperly.94
Eustachius is playing verbal games with actual infinity and syn-
categorematic infinite. He does not really hold that syncategorematic
infinites are, properly speaking, actual infinites. In fact, he reaffirms that
only the actual categorematic infinite is truly and properly infinite . . .
Thus the actual syncategorematic infinite is not properly an infinite in
act . . . it is to be called potential infinite.95 And he rejoins the standard
doctrine. He is even careful to look as if he is upholding Gods absolute
96 Eustachius , Physics, tract. III, quaest. , An detur aut falsum dari possit
infinitum, p. .
97 Dupleix , pp. . See also Goudin, [], vol. II, pp. for
the argument that God alone is infinite in act and that inifnity in act is impossible for any
creature, magnitude, or multitude.
98 De Ceriziers , p. .
99 De Ceriziers , pp. .
100 Principles I, art. .
101 AT V, .
102 AT V, .
103 AT V, .
104 AT V, ; Principles II, art. ; AT XI, . For the extension of matter called
by the Church, and that his own opinion is not as difficult to accept
as theirs.107 Oddly enough, Nicholas of Cusa was the figure whose doc-
trine about the extension of the world was closest to Descartes. In his De
docta ignorantia, Cusa asserted that only the absolute maximum is infi-
nite, for it alone is everything it can be. The universe does not include
everything existing outside God, but it is not God; therefore it is not pos-
itively infinite. However, there is no term limiting the universe, so that
we can call it infinite, if we take the word in a privative sense, signifying
an absence of limit. More exactly, we might say that the universe is nei-
ther finite nor infinite.108 For Cusa the universe is indeterminate in both
sense of the word: it does not have a boundary (it is not terminated) and
it lacks precision (it cannot be determined by us).109 Hence, Cusas doc-
trine is remarkably like Descartes. Still, Descartes was right in thinking
that his opinion should not have caused any difficulty for Christians.
However, although there are precedents for thinking the world infinite
or indefinite in extent in scholastic philosophy, I have not been able
to find a late scholastic philosopher who argued that there cannot be
a plurality of worlds. The closest anyone comes to such an assertion is
the argument that there would a unity to the world if there were only
one; but even that argument is couched in a language that allows for the
possibility of plural worlds: Is it not likely that, being able to create an
infinity of worlds, he produced only our own in order to mark the unity
of the Creator in the unity of the work?110 Indeed, the most conservative
thinkers take it for granted that God, who created this world, could create
another.111 Thus, Descartes is truly out on a limb by himself on this final
issue.
107 AT V, .
108 De docta ignorantia, II, chap. in Cusa [], vol. I, fol. xiii.
109 De docta ignorantia, II, chap. in Cusa [], vol. I, fol. xiii verso. See also
Idiota de mente chap. and in Cusa [], vol. I, fol. lxxxi verso to fol. lxxxiii
verso.
110 De Ceriziers , p. .
111 For example, Bouju does not treat the issue directly, but when discussing what there
is above the first heaven, he claims, in good Aristotelian fashion, that there is nothing: no
body can have its natural place beyond the first heaven; there are no surrounding places
for a body to be contained there, and thus no void nor a real space. The only thing one
can say, according to Bouju, is that there is an imaginary space above the first heaven
which is nothing else than its non-repugnance toward being the situation of a body, if
God wanted to create one there. (, vol. I, p. ). For the background to these issues,
see Duhem , chapters .
chapter nine
Cartesians
it did not even have authority in Catholic countries such as France, where
censorship was the domain of temporal powers: the King and individual
universities.5 Moreover, Cartesianism seems to have made great inroads
into French universities in the s and s, spreading from private
lectures and salons into university teaching and student writings, even
though candidates for chairs in philosophy were required to deny the so-
called new philosophy and to fight against Descartes.6 The situation was
about to change in the s. In , the Archbishop of Paris, Franois
de Harlay, published the following verbal decree from the King:
The King, having learned that certain opinions that the faculty of theology
had once censored, and that the parlement had prohibited from teaching
and from publishing, are now being disseminated, not only in the Uni-
versity, but also in the rest of this city and in certain parts of the king-
dom, either by strangers, or by people internally, and wishing to prevent
the course of this opinion that could bring some confusion in the explana-
tion of our mysteries, pushed by his zeal and his ordinary piety, has com-
manded me to tell you of his intentions. The King exhorts you, sirs, to
make it so that no other doctrine than the one brought forth by the rules
and statutes of the University is taught in the Universities and put into the-
ses, and leaves you to your prudent and wise conduct to take the necessary
path for this.7
The reference to certain opinions that the faculty of theology had once
censored was, interestingly enough, a reference to a condemnation of
atomism in , in which some in Descartes circle, Mersenne and Jean-
Baptiste Morin, for example, had played a role.8 That condemnation was
being used against Cartesianism almost five decades later. The confu-
sion in the explanation of the mysteries was also a reference to the same
episode. One of the reasons given for the condemnation was that holding
an atomist philosophy would have been inconsistent with giving an intel-
ligible explanation of transubstantiation.9 It was clear that the scholastic
5 See McClaughlin .
6 Bouillier , vol. I, p. .
7 Bouillier , vol. I, p. .
8 Both Mersenne and Morin applauded the condemnation. For Mersennes descrip-
tion of theses, see chapter . For an analysis of the event, see Garber and .
9 See Armogathe . The loci for Descartes view are the end of Replies
IV, Replies VI, section , and the Letters to Mesland (AT IV, pp. & ).
It was not out of the ordinary for the King to attempt to protect the mysteries of the faith.
Neither were Cartesians and anti-Aristotelians singled out in this respect. See chapters
and .
chapter nine
metaphysics of matter and form was well suited to explain the mys-
tery. While the religious and political authorities might have had many
objections to Cartesianism (or to any atomist or corpuscularian philos-
ophy) the Kings edict had the effect of focusing the criticism on the
Descartes account of transubstantiation, something the Faculty of Theol-
ogy of the University of Paris expressly censored, the Parlement prohib-
ited, and the King cautioned about. In any case, the Kings exhortation
was a serious threat to Cartesianism in France; various Universities
Angers, Caen, Parisfollowed with attempts to carry out the Kings
wishes.
We have a first-hand account of the subsequent events at Angers in a
journal kept by Franois Babin, Doctor of the Faculty of Theology and
financial officer of the University, someone horrified by the attitudes of
the Cartesians.
Young people are no longer taught anything other than to rid themselves
of their childhood prejudices and to doubt all thingsincluding whether
they themselves exist in the world. They are taught that the soul is a
substance whose essence is always to think something; that children think
from the time they are in their mothers bellies, and that when they grow
up they have less need of teachers who would teach them what they have
never known than of coaches who would have them recall in their minds
the ancient ideas of all things, which were created with them. It is no longer
fashionable to believe that fire is hot, that marble is hard, that animate
bodies sense pain. These truths are too ancient for those who love novelty.
Some of them assert that animals are only machines and puppets without
motion, without life, and without sensation; that there are no substantial
forms other than rational soul; and by completely contrary principles . . .
others teach that the souls of animals are immortal, spiritual, and created
directly by God, as are those of men.
It is clear that, for Babin, something had gone terribly wrong. He contin-
ued his observations, moving from pedagogical and epistemic to meta-
physical and theological problems, and ultimately to political ones:
The Cartesians assert that accidents are not really distinct from substance;
that it would be well to guard oneself from attributing some knowledge or
certainty to the testimony of our senses . . . They make the essence of all
bodies consist in local extension, without worrying that Christs body does
not better accommodate their principles and our mysteries; they teach
that something does not stop being true in philosophy even though faith
and the Catholic religion teach us the contraryas if the Christian and
the philosopher could have been two distinct things. Their boldness is
so criminal that it attacks Gods power, enclosing him within the limits
and the sphere of things he has made, as if creating from nothing would
cartesians, gassendists, and censorship
10 Babin , p. .
11 Babin , p. .
12 Bouillier , vol. I, p. . Babin , p. . Boileau , vol. , pp.
from a long poem entitled Monsieur Descartes aux Universitez, Sur la defense de
l enseigner, qu elles se sont procures: Tumultaire amas de quatre Facultez, / Bizarres
Universitez, / Qui pour me chasser de la France, / Feittes la geurres toute outrance, /
Croyez-vous vos voeux exaucez / Parce que vous me bannissez, / De l enceinte de vos
Colleges / Comme un faiseur de Sacrileges? . . . / N est-ce point, Recteurs bilieux, / Ce qui
vous donnant dans les yeux / Vous remplis de jalousie, / Contre ntre Philosophie . . .
Babin , pp. .
13 Babin , pp. . In fact, in , the Oratorians and Jesuits got together at a
general congress and agreed not to teach Descartes new philosophy. For the text of the
prohibition, see Ariew , p. ; trans. ACS pp. .
14 See Boileau , vol. , pp. .
15 Plusieurs raisons pour empcher la censure ou la condemnation de la philosophie de
to create troubles for the Jansenists.18 But he said, even those without
such political intentions can cause problems unwittingly, because it is
impossible for an edict to change peoples opinions and to cause those
who do not accept a particular philosophy (such as Aristotles) to embrace
it. By necessity such an edict can only be general and thus cause endless
disputes, since everyone can interpret it as they wish. In any case, peoples
minds are not so flexible that anyone can have the freedom of believing
whatever they want. As the history of previous condemnations showed,
you cannot succeed in requiring people to hold a particular philosophy.
When this is tried, the authority of the church is compromised. Arnauld
then listed various condemnations of philosophy, pointing to absurdities
and contradictions in the prohibitions.
Arnauld based his account on de Launoys De varia Aristotelis for-
tuna, published in ; it was a part of a growing interest, during the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, in the history of condemnations,
stretching from de Launoys work, to a tract by Jean Duhamel,
Quaedam recentiorum philosophorum ac praesertim Cartesii propositiones
damnatae ac prohibitae, and culminating in the three massive volumes of
Duplessis d Argentr, Collectio judiciorum de novis erroribus, published
in .
Arnaulds first group of condemnations detailed the thirteenth cen-
tury battles between Aristotle and the church. Notwithstanding various
church condemnations and prohibitions in , , and , Alber-
tus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas taught and commented upon Aristotles
books. Similarly, in , Aristotles books on metaphysics and physics
were again prohibited by Apostolic authority. Yet two years later students
were receiving degrees based on their readings of Aristotles prohibited
books. In contrast, the second group concerned the prohibitions of anti-
Aristotelian writings by the church in the sixteenth and seventeenth cen-
turies, from Ramus criticisms of Aristotelian logic to de Claves, Villon,
and Bitauds anti-Aristotelian atomist opinions. Arnauld pointedly indi-
cated that the anti-atomist edict, which forbade any teaching against
the approved ancient authors, with capital punishment as penalty, did not
atic. The difficulties that Cartesians were having were political, according to Arnauld,
the Jesuits acting against their enemies, the Jansenists. Arnauld also argued that since
Descartes dedicated his metaphysics to the faculty of theology at Paris in , the fact
that the faculty had been silent about Descartes work for thirty years indicated that the
attempt at condemnation was a political act (Cousin , p. ).
chapter nine
19 One should note that, as early as , Gassendi had announced his intention
of writing against Aristotles doctrines of space and void: Le Livre III est consacr
l Exposition de la Physique. Ici l on s attaque au nombre des principes aristotliciens,
et l on prouve entre autres choses que les Formes sont accidentelles . . . L espace des
anciens est rappel d exil, est substitu au Lieu aristotlique. Le Vide est introduit ou pl-
tot rtabli dans la Nature, Gassendi , pp. . And Gassendi was almost immedi-
ately recognized as an opponent of Aristotles, as can be seen by Frey , chap. , In quo
Petrus Gassendus innumera falsissima, et impia Aristotelem protulisse docens cribratur,
pp. ; chap. , Patricius, Gassendus et Campanella de infinito, de vacuo, de ideis,
de lineis, de Galaxia contra Aristotelem sententientes, reiiciuntur. pp. ; chap. ,
Patricius et Gassendus impiam omnem et falsam de Deo doctrinam Aristotelicam asser-
entes, cribrantur, pp. ; and chap. , Ramus, Ludius, Patricius Gassendus reiiciun-
tur, asserentes nullum Peripateticorum usum Dialectices novisse, pp. .
20 Quand nous considrons, d une part, la puissance infinie de Dieu, et de l autre, la
foiblesse de notre raison, le bon sens doit nous faire juger qu il n est pas trange que Dieu
puisse faire ce que notre raison ne savoit comprendre, Arnauld, in Cousin , vol. ,
p. .
cartesians, gassendists, and censorship
21 Fabri .
22 Maignan .
chapter nine
of Rome had care to place in their Index: Renati Descartes Opera sequentia
donec corrigantur. De Prim. philosophi in qu Dei existentia, & anima
humanae corpore distinctio demonstratur.23
avowal was not usually connected with Descartes. See Ariew ; trans. ACS p. .
Of course, the condemnation of cannot be considered the necessary consequence
of the events of ; it itself needs to be contextualized. Here again the arret
burlesque might come to the rescue: in a later edition of it, the line referring to the
heroes of the arret, Cartistes et Gassendistes, was expanded to include Pourchochistes
et Malebranchistes. It does not take a lot of imagination to conclude that much of the
condemnation of was directed against Edmond Pourchot, the first Professor of
Philosophy at the University of Paris openly espousing Cartesian doctrines; Pourchot
taught at the Collge Mazarin from to . See Brockliss .
26 See for example, Duhamel ; Frassen ; Goudin ; de la Grange ;
Vincent .
cartesians, gassendists, and censorship
Gassendists
That was also the problem Franois Bernier, the most ardent defender of
Gassendism in the seventeenth century, set out to resolve in his Eclair-
cissement sur le livre de M. de la Ville. Bernier needed to reply to de la
Ville because his attacks were directed generally against the new philos-
ophy and thus also against Gassendi.28 As Bayle explained:
Bernier, so well known because of his travels and the regard the celebrated
Mr. Gassendi had for him, and because of the public testimony he gave
of his veneration and gratitude for so great a Master, fearing the malign
influences of the zeal of these people, had secretly published a small treatise
(the third piece of this collection), copies of which he distributed in secret
to his friends and even to some prelates.29
The content of the small treatise, however, was not as high-minded as one
would have hoped for; according to Bayle,
He lets them do whatever they want to the Cartesians and declares himself
very vigorously against some Cartesian doctrines, in order to make his
peace more easily; having as many reasons as the Cartesians to fear that
he would be accused of heresy with respect to transubstantiation, he does
what he can in order to have his innocence known.30
Oddly, Bernier, at the same time, was publishing the second edition
of the Abrg de la philosophie de Gassendi.31 and had just published a
small work entitled Doutes sur quelques-uns des principaux chapitres de
son abrg de la philosophie de Gassendi,32 most of which he also inserted
as Doutes sur quelques-uns des principaux chapitres de ce tome [i. e.,
vol. ], in his second edition of the Abrg (II, pp. ).33 In these
two places, Bernier seemed to abandon Gassendis doctrine of an absolute
space independent of things, in which all things are contained and suc-
ceed each other,34 in order to identify space and body, as did Descartes.35
The seeming inconsistency of someone criticizing the Gassendist theory
of space and leaning toward the Cartesian doctrine of space while deliv-
ering Cartesianism to its scholastic and church opponents on the very
same issue so disturbed Francisque Bouillier that he felt the need to chide
Bernier some two centuries later; echoing Bayles accusation, Bouillier
wrote: Bernier is wrong to seek to prove his innocence at the Cartesians
expense, even more so since he himself abandons Gassendi in order to get
nearer to Descartes in one of the subjects most suspect for theologians,
in the debate about the Eucharist.36 But was Bernier really being incon-
sistent? Did he really abandon Gassendi in his Doutes? Did he actually
compromise the Cartesians in his Reply to de la Ville? Instead of sim-
ply blaming Bernier for some real or imagined slight against Descartes,
one can use this episode to explicate the patterns of debates, in the latter
31 Bernier .
32 Bernier .
33 The main difference between the pamphlet and the Doutes in the second
edition of the Abrg, other than the inclusion of the relevant passages from Gassendi
in the pamphlet, is that Bernier deletes a couple of his Doubts in the second
edition; missing are two discussions of void: pp. , au lieu que nous devrions
corriger nostre imagination, et concevoir que le vide n estant rien, un corps dans le
vide ne seroit en aucune chose, ou en aucun lieu; and pp. , si la raison qu on
apporte ordinairement pour prouver la necessit des petits vuides, est icy dans toute
sa force. Both discussions are actually attempts to defend Gassendi rather than real
doubts.
34 For Gassendis theory of space, referring to the doctrines of the Animadversiones
and Syntagma, see Bloch , chap. ; see also Koyr, Gassendi et la science de son
temps, and Rochot, La vraie philosophie de Gassendi, both in Actes du Congrs du
Tricentenaire de Pierre Gassendi (), pp. and . A recent text treating
Gassendis theory of space and Berniers critique of it is Lennon , chap. , sec. and
chap. , sec. .
35 For Descartes doctrine of extension and space, see Principia Philosophiae II, art.
, II, pp. .
chapter nine
him to do so. And, in his first doubt, he did reject the Gassendist doctrine
of an incorporeal, penetrable, and immobile space, the reference for all
motion, although, in opposition to Descartes, he defended the possibility
of the void.42 When reading Berniers Doutes, one should keep in mind
his own characterization of them in the preface to the treatise:
These doubts are not about the foundation of this philosophy, for I do not
believe that one can reasonably philosophize using a system other than that
of atoms and the void; however, they are about some important matters,
such as space, place, motion, time, eternity, and some others. Whether
these doubts are well founded or not, you will judge. This small book will
always serve you in two ways. The first is to let you see the poverty of all of
our philosophies (I have been philosophizing for thirty years extremely
persuaded of certain things, and yet here I begin to have doubts about
them). The other, to give a rather general idea of Gassendis philosophy,
which, after all, seems to me the most reasonable, the simplest, the most
sensible, and the easiest of all philosophies.43
These thoughts were echoed in his preface to the Doutes from the
second edition of the Abrg:
I have been philosophizing for forty years extremely persuaded of certain
things, and yet here I begin to have doubts about them . . . However,
Madam, this must not shock us, and we must not imagine that all natural
things are of that degree of obscurity; philosophy, mainly the philosophy
of Gassendi, always has the advantage that it allows us to discover a great
number of truths which without its assistance would remain hidden to
us.44
In his Doutes, Bernier applied to himself the form of his own analysis
with respect to the problem of the Eucharist from the Eclaircissement. He
tried to act in the fashion of the magician who causes one to accept the
appearance of criticism, while steadfastly maintaining the (Gassendist)
substance underneath the appearances. Ultimately, Berniers skirmishes
with the Cartesians and the Aristotelians revealed the strategy of the
42 That is, Bernier defends the possibility of intra-mundane, small voids, not of an
extra-mundane void. He devotes his first three Doubts to the issues of space, place, and
void: . Si l espace de la maniere que monsieur Gassendi l explique est soutenable; .
Si l on peut dire que le lieu soit l espace; . Si l on peut dire que le lieu soit immobile.
Bernier, Doutes, in vol. II of Bernier , pp. . As we have already indicated,
Berniers final doubt. Si l opinion des ancients touchant l essence de la matiere se
peut accorder avec les mysteres de la religionis a repeat of the problem of the Eucharist,
from the Eclaircissement, with an added reference to chapter , on Qualities.
43 Bernier , preface.
44 Bernier , vol. II, pp. .
cartesians, gassendists, and censorship
Cartesio-Gassendists
45 Of course, this is a single study, based on a few thinkers and a few texts. It depends
upon the extent to which thinkers such as Arnauld and Bernier and their positions can
be thought as typical.
chapter nine
46 Charleton , p. .
47 Charleton , p. .
48 Charleton , Advertisement to the Reader, unpaginated.
49 For more on Charleton as an eclectic, see Eric Lewis (), to whom I am indebted
51 Charleton , p. .
52 Charleton , p. .
53 Charleton , p. .
54 Charleton , p. .
chapter nine
claims that Angels can be conceived in place, have mobility, and can
coexist with the corporeal dimensions of body. Charletons eclecticism
tempered his mechanistic tendencies. His assimilation of Cartesianism
did not extend to explanations of all physical phenomena. For instance,
he rejected Descartes theory of vision in favor of one he attributed to
Epicurus, but which sounded Aristotelian as well. Charletons ability to
switch explanatory frameworks and meld the doctrines of Gassendi and
Descartes represents still another response to the challenges brought by
the novel philosophies. We will see more such remixing of Descartes and
Gassendi when Robert Boyle will declare the two thinkers as belonging
to the same camp, as both being adherents of the mechanical philoso-
phy.
One of the first Cartesians was Jacques Du Roure, who belonged to
the group centering about Descartes literary executor Claude Clerselier.
Du Roure is the first to have published a complete textbook of Cartesian
philosophy, La Philosophie divise en toutes ses parties (), and sub-
sequently Abrg de la vraye philosophie (), before the more famous
ones of Antoine Le Grand and Pierre-Sylvain Rgis. In Du Roures case,
the parts of philosophy included natural theology and the usual elements
of the curriculum: metaphysics, logic, ethics, and physics. Du Roure
began his logic text with an examination of method, by which he meant
primarily analysis and synthesis; he continued by discussing experience,
including the following statements he takes to be true: All our knowledge
comes from experience [that is, the senses]. [ . . . ]And whoever makes use
of reason more than experience or reflections on experiences often falls
into error.55 So with Du Roure we have somebody who falls clearly into
the Cartesian camp, though he defends a view that might be thought at
variance with orthodox Cartesianism, displaying an epistemology that
looks more like Gassendist empiricism.
Du Roure was not alone in producing a more empirical Cartesianism.
Each in their own way, the Oratorian Lamy and the Lanterniste Bayle
seem also to fit the category. Lamys Cartesian credentials are clear: as
early as , one can find the General of the order eliciting a promise
from Lamy, who had just taught his first philosophy course at the College
of Saumur, to stop teaching the opinions of Descartes;56 and, as indicated
above, Lamy and three other Oratorian professors of the College of
55 Du Roure , sec. .
56 Girbal , p. .
cartesians, gassendists, and censorship
corporeae sunt? unde immaterialis at immortalis est anima illa qua belluae sentient, in
Babin , p. . Marginal note: Ita nullus Philosophus Christianus. Reply from the
censor: Des Carthes a est moins temeraire, et a eu plus d estime de son ame que le
P. Fromentier, puis qu il fait entrer en communaut de la spiritualit et de l immortalit
de la sienne les ames des Bestes, mais aussi en levant les ames des Chiens la dignit de
celles des Hommes, n est ce pas ravaller les ames des Hommes la condition mortelle de
celles des autres Animaux? Et en assurant que les unes et les autres n ont qu une mme
origine, n est-ce pas assez insiner qu elles sont toutes tires de la matiere? p. .
60 . Accidentia non distinguuntur realiter substantiis, et illa sententia quae illa non
distinguit subjecto est propior fidei, quam quae distinguit. Accidentium distinctio plus
nocet fidei realis praesentiae corporis Christi in Eucharisti, quam non distinctio, nam
accidentia si adesse dixeris, videtur sequi qud mutatio nulla facta sit, ibid., p. . These
propositions are identified as Cartesian: Ita Cartes. sub finem resp. ad as objectiones
et in resp. ad as objnum. ait. Omnin repugnat dari accidentia real. etc. alibi, ,
p. .
61 . Mundus est magnitudine indefinitus et omne spatium quod cogitatur extr
mundum non imaginarium est sed reale, ibid., p. . This thesis is also identified
as Cartesian: Ita Carthes. pri. phil. p. . n. cognoscimus praterea hunc mundum
nullos extensionis suae fines habere nam ultr ipsos spatia indefinit extensa, et realia
percipimus, , p. .
62 . Veritatis sincero amatori unico momento in vit licet esse academicum, scep-
ticum imo debet semel, cit, simul, omnia in dubium revocare, et quasi incerta essent
quaerere. Tanta enim est vis veterum opinionum et diu defensae atque creditae falsitatis
chapter nine
all things is a principle that tends toward atheism and upsets the foun-
dations of the highest of mysteries. [ . . . ] This principle manifestly entails
atheism or at least the heresy of the Manicheans, who accepted a good
and an evil principle for all creatures.63 Finally, he criticized the atomism
of Fromentier and Descartes,64 even though both philosophers formally
rejected atomism:
The opinion of Epicurus and Democritus, that the world has been formed
by the fortunate encounter of atoms and small bodies flying about from all
parts, has been treated as extravagant and impious. One wants to believe
that Descartes and his followers do not teach that the universe was made
by chance and without Gods providence, but, at bottom, what they say is
not different than what Democritus and Epicurus advance, since Descartes
only wants God to have created all matter, divided it into almost equal
parts, agitated these parts in various directions, each to its own proper
center, and several around a common center; after that, God can remain at
rest [ . . .] Is there something more odious in Epicurus opinion not found
in Descartes hypothesis?65
In the case of Lamy, the censor objected to ten different propositions
identified as Cartesian. Two of these objections concern problems already
raised against Fromentier about the explanation of the Eucharist. How-
ever, in Lamys case, instead of just protesting about real accidents, the
censor objected to the definition of extension as the essence of body and
to the rejection of substantial forms.66 The censor also derided Lamys
acceptance of the cogito, his consequent definition of the soul as cogi-
tatio, the assertion that children think in their mothers womb, and the
proposition that sensations such as pain are experienced in the soul, not
ut sol omnium dubitatione expurgari possit animus, ac revera in sensibilibus, nec ego
percepisse me dico quod vigilem, Babin , p. . Marginal note: Ita Carthes. prin.
ph. . p. n. . De omnibus studeamus dubitare n. . illa etiam de quibus dubitabimus
utile erit habere pro falsis. [n. .] Facile quidem supponimus nullum esse Deum, nullum
coelum, etc. , p. .
63 Babin p. , pp. .
64 . Prima principia nihil aliud possunt esse quam Democriti atomi, et minimae illae
partes materiae, quibus constant; Democritum aliis omnibus praeferamus, forma ex mul-
tarum compositione atomorum exsurgit, ibid., p. . Marginal note: Ita Carthesi. p.
princ. phi. num. etc. hinc sit ut hi globuli coelestes particulis tertii Elementi corpora
omnia tertiae terrae regionis componentibus immisti varios in iis effectus producant,
ibid.
65 Babin , p. . p. .
66 See Lamys propositions and in Babin . p. (also in Girbal , pp.
Moreover, Lamy praised Descartes for his account of mind and the union
of mind and body: He is the one who has spoken the best about the
mind and who has distinguished its functions from those of the machine
of the body with the greatest clarity [ . . . ] One can hardly add anything
to what he teaches regarding the union of the soul and body.72 Lamy
used this praise as an introduction to Malebranches account of sensation
and morals; these, he asserted, were based on the existence of God being
proved by all things and the dependence all creatures have on him.73
According to Lamy, These are all the principles of the new philosophy
of Descartes, before whom nobody has shown so clearly the relation of
man to God.74
But, in order to understand what Lamy found most appealing about
Descartes, one has to look further into what he thought Descartes meth-
od amounted to. Lamy talked of method in Ide de la logique, another
of the Entretiens, without mentioning Descartes at allalthough the
themes discussed by him were Cartesian (and Malebranchian) and clear-
ly reminiscent of the Meditations. For example, one can find the Cartesian
criterion of truth as Gods guarantee that clear and distinct ideas are
true:
Humans are made so that, in the same way that they are attracted by the
good, they are compelled by clear and distinct knowledge, which requires
their consent. And hence they are not deceived, since nature, which is
good, cannot require them to consent to what would be false. I understand
by nature here the Author of all things, or the very things such as he has
made them.75
One can also see various versions of the cogito: When we are reflecting
on [the fact that] we are thinking, we cannot doubt that we are existing.76
And again: But, after all that, when I consider that whether I am awake
or asleep, whether or not I am being deceived, whether or not I have
wings, I am. For if I am being deceived, I am therefore deceived; therefore
I am. Thus, I must consent to [the fact] that I exist.77 Furthermore,
one can find the Cartesian distinction between the understanding and
the will: There are, properly speaking, only two different operations of
the mind. We perceive by means of the first; we consent by means of the
second.78
However, Lamys Cartesianism was framed in a context that Descartes
would not have recognized. Ide de la logique begins with the statement
that We are the work of God; we therefore have no cause for believing
that our nature is defective.79 The principle could be given a Cartesian
interpretation, but Lamy took it further than one might have expected.
For Lamy, we can always determine the true simply by being attentive:
Attention constitutes the principal part of wisdom. [ . . . ] An attentive
mind is capable of everything.80 Another aspect of Lamys optimism was
that his notion of a clear idea encompassed much that Descartes would
never have thought of as a clear and distinct idea. In fact, Lamy used an
example of a tree in front of him as a model of a clear idea, at the level of
the cogito:
When something is proposed to us with complete clearness, it is not in
our power to believe that it is not what it appears to us. [ . . .] For example,
when we reflect on [the fact that] we are thinking, we cannot doubt that we
are existing. I see clearly this tree before me, I touch it, I cannot doubt that
it is not there, because this idea of ourselves and of this tree that I touch
contains within it the idea of an actual existence.81
True, Lamy did not go so far as to suggest that the senses give us what
the tree is, just that it is. Nevertheless, Lamy went well beyond Descartes
conclusion in the Sixth Meditation, that the senses tell us that bodies
exist, suggesting that the senses tell us that a particular body exists.
Descartes would not have thought that the tree could be perceived clearly,
nor that the tree would be known to exist with the same degree of
certainty with which I know myself to exist. Lamys Cartesianism seemed
to have gone in the direction of empiricism. However, Lamy remained
agnostic about the veracity of the senses: I cannot examine here whether
the senses are deceitful or not; lacking this examination, it suffices,
in order not to be mistaken, to consent only to our having such and
78 Lamy , p. .
79 Lamy , p. .
80 Lamy , p. . Lamy had so little doubt about the human capacity for knowledge
that he even thought one accepted false religions (as Protestants did, according to him)
simply because of lack of attention (Lamy , p. ). The only role that Lamy makes for
doubt is that it puts us on our toes (Lamy , p. ).
81 Lamy , p. .
chapter nine
such ideas and such sensations on such and such occasions. And since
this is the only clear thing, it is the only thing we must accept.82 At
the same time, Lamy was enough of an Augustinian that he wished to
defend the proposition that there are spiritual ideas we find inside us
taught to us by nature: he who is always [seeking what is] outside of
himself, who thinks only of things he finds in bodies, is not capable of
[consciously] perceiving everything that nature requires him to receive
as true.83 This may resonate better with Cartesianism, but it looks more
Augustinian than Cartesian. For example, Lamy talks about what nature
teaches us, not what our nature teaches us and talks about it as the
seeds (les semences) all truths.84 The overall impression Lamy gives is
that he was an Augustinian who dabbled in Cartesianism. Since there
was no Cartesian order and linkage of reasons in his philosophy,85 he
could pick and choose among Cartesian doctrines, modifying them to
suit his Augustinianism. By putting Cartesian philosophy at the level
of an empirical science, he could preserve his Augustinian theology as
more basic; for him, in general, the Cartesianism was made to fit the
Augustinianism.
An even more empirical form of Cartesianism can be found in the
work of Franois Bayle. Bayle was a physician and, for most of his life,
after , a member of the Faculty of medicine at the University of
Toulouse. He was associated with the Socit des Lanternistesan open
forum in Toulouse for discussing ideas and reporting on new experi-
ments. He was an active participant in the Societys meetings, teaching
alongside Rgis, Emmanuel Maignan, and others; such luminaries and
Cartesians as Malebranche knew of him. His main philosophical work,
The General Systeme of the Cartesian Philosophy ()surviving only
in English translationwas a synopsis of the Cartesian system, con-
structed out of Descartes whole corpus. In it, Bayle went through the
Cartesian system in an order somewhat reminiscent of the Principles: he
detailed the cogito, the consequence that the soul knows itself better than
it knows any other thing, both proofs for the existence of God, Gods
82 Lamy , p. . Lamy also adds C est aussi aux Phisiciens d examiner si toutes
nos connoissances viennent des sens, ou s il y en a quelqu une qui n en vient point, Lamy
, p. .
83 Lamy , p. .
84 Lamy , p. .
85 It is Descartes who said: those who do not take the time to grasp the order
guarantee that we cannot err in what we clearly and distinctly know, the
certainty of the existence of bodies, the thesis that errors proceed from
the ill-use of our freedom, etc. However, he concluded the first book,
treating metaphysics, with the following remark: when we say that the
certainty of our Understanding is greater than that of our Senses, we
mean nothing else, than that the judgments we form in a riper age, by
reason of some new Observations we have made, are more certain than
those, we have formed from infancy, without having reflected on them.86
Bayle did make the final turn into empirical Cartesianism. For him the
corrective for the prejudices of childhood was not reason, but experience.
His empiricism became even more marked in his later works.
A Conclusion
86 Bayle , pp. .
87 Prohibited propositions by Michel-Angelo Tamburini, General of the order in
, in Ariew ; trans. ACS pp. .
chapter nine
The Cogito in
shift occurred in skepticism itself, between ancient and modern skepticism, a thesis
that was even held during the seventeenth century (see Pierre Bayles Dictionary (),
Pyrrho, note B). But again, not all moderns took skepticism seriously. Even Cartesians in
the seventeenth century rejected, reinterpreted, or severely limited Descartes method of
chapter ten
doubt; see Schmaltz or Ariew a. In any case, when one sees a genuinely skeptical
modern philosopher such as David Hume, his skepticism is Ciceronian, or consequent,
as he calls it, and practiced in opposition to Descartes antecedent skepticism. See
Humes Enquiry ( []), sec. , Of the Academical or Sceptical Philosophy.
4 De Civitate Dei XI, ; De Libero Arbitrio II, ; De Trinitate X, and XV, .
5 See To Mersenne, May, , AT I, ; November , II, ; and December
cogito of the Discourse, the letter is late enough that Descartes has already written the
Meditations, which he is circulating: The little I have written on metaphysics is already
on its way to Paris, where I hope it will be printed. What I have here is a rough copy so
full of crossings out that I could barely read it myself. That is why I cannot offer it to you.
But as soon as it is printed, I shall take pains to send you one of the first copies, since it
pleases you to do me the favor of wishing to read it, and I shall be very glad to learn your
judgment of it. Ibid., AT III, .
7 In the Synopsis to the Meditations, AT VII, , Descartes is clear that these moves
are not an immediate result of the cogito, but require the whole sequence of reasons from
Meditations II to VI. He makes the same point in reply to Hobbes, AT VII, . For a
the cogito in the seventeenth century
particularly interesting analysis of the relations between Augustine and Descartes, see
Marion , esp. chap. .
8 Though Vincent Carraud argues convincingly that Pascals knowledge of Augus-
tines philosophy is not as deep as one might have thought; see Carraud .
9 . . . car je sais combien il y a de diffrence entre crire un mot l aventure sans
y faire une rflexion plus longue et plus tendue et apercevoir dans ce mot une suite
admirable de consquences, qui prouve la distinction des natures matrielle et spirituelle,
et en faire un principe ferme et soutenu d une physique entire, comme Descartes a
prtendu faire. Pascal, De l esprit gomtrique, in Pascal , p. col. a.
10 We should also recall Pascals historiographical point from the Penses (Pascal
): Let no one say I have said nothing new: the arrangement of the material is new.
When we play handball, we both play with the same ball, but one of us places it better.
S/L.
chapter ten
of God, supreme cause of our being, is unfolded from the cogito, knowl-
edge of self, which is taken to trump the possibility that the senses are
deceiving us or that we are dreaming. According to Silhon:
Every man who has the use of judgment and reason can know that he
is, that is, that he has being. This knowledge is so infallible that, even
though all the operations of the external senses might in themselves be
deceptive, or even though we cannot distinguish between them and those
of an impaired imagination, nor wholly assure ourselves whether we are
awake or asleep, or whether what we are seeing is the truth or illusion and
pretense, it is impossible that a man who has the power, as some have, to
enter into himself, and to make the judgment that he is, should be deceived
in this judgment, and should not be.
We have a clear exposition of Silhons version of the cogito. Silhon follows
it up with an interlude about some eternal truths and then rejoins his line
of reasoning by concluding:
Now this judgment that a man makes, that he is, is not a frivolous piece of
knowledge, or an impertinent reflection. He can rise from there to the first
and original source of his being, and to the knowledge of God himself. He
can draw from it the demonstration of the existence of a divinity. . . . He
can draw from it the first movements toward religion and the seed of this
virtue that inclines us to submit ourselves to God, as to the first cause, and
to the supreme principle of our being.11
These passages of Silhon occur in his Second Discourse, entitled: That
It Is Necessary to Show God Exists before Proving the Immortality of the
Soul. Refutation of Pyrrhonism and of the Arguments That Montaigne
Brings Forth to Establish It. Various Kinds of Demonstrations.12 Thus
11 Tout homme disje, qui a l usage du jugement et de la raison, peut connaitre qu il est,
c est dire qu il a un estre, et cette connoissance est si infaillible, que soit ou que toutes les
operations des sens externes soient en elles mesmes trompeuses, ou qu on ne puisse pas
distinguer entre elles, et celles de l imagination altere, ny s assurer entierement si l on
veuille ou si l on songe, et si ce qu on voit est verit ou illusion et feinte; il est impossible
qu un homme qui a la force, comme plusieurs l ont, de rentrer en lui mesme, et de faire
ce jugement, qu il est qu il se trompe en ce jugement, et qu il ne soit pas. . . .
Or ce jugement que l homme fait qu il est, n est pas une connoissance frivole, ny une
reflexion impertinente. Il peut de la monter par discours jusqu la premiere et originelle
source de son estre, et la connoissance de Dieu mesme. Il peut en tirer la demonstration
de l existence d une Divinit. . . . Il peut en tirer les premiers mouvements de la Religion,
et le germe de cette vertu qui nous incline nous soumettre Dieu, comme la premiere
cause, et au souverain principe de nostre estre. Silhon , pp. ; trans. in ACS
pp. .
12 Qu il est necessaire de monstrer qu il y a un Dieu pour prouver l Immortalit de
l Ame. Refutation du Pirrhonisme et des raisons que Montaigne apporte pour l establir.
Divers genres de dmonstrations.
the cogito in the seventeenth century
also Popkin, who is a bit more qualified than the others: So in his [Silhons] second book
of , De l immortalit de l Ame, a much more searching and interesting argument is
offered, reflecting perhaps his acquaintance with the young Descartes, , pp.
. The question arises: what evidence is there of a Cartesian cogito before ? There
is a shadow of a cogito in Rule : If a man proposes to himself the problem of examining
all the truths for the knowledge of which human reason sufficesa task which should be
undertaken at least once in his life, it seems to me, by anyone who is in all seriousness
eager to attain excellence of mindhe will certainly discover by the rules given above
that nothing can be known before the intellect, since the knowledge of all other things
depends on this, and not the reverse AT X, written sometime between and
. Some people have speculated that the short treatise in metaphysics that Descartes
was writing in might have been an early version of Discourse, Part V, containing a
cogito. But it remained unfinished and it has been lost. The only thing we know about
the treatise is that it concerned the existence of God and immortality of the soul. (See To
Mersenne, November , AT I, .)
chapter ten
15 C est une vrit aussi sensible la raison, que celle du Soleil l est aux yeux sains,
que l operation suppose l estre, qu il est necessaire qu une cause soit affin qu elle agisse,
et qu il est impossible que ce qui n est pas face quelque chose. Dieu mesme peut tirer du
neant l estre et l existence ce qui n est pas: il n a pas besoin pour agir de sujet ny de
matiere, et toutes choses crees sont sorties immediatement de sa puissance. Mais de faire
que ce qui n est pas agisse auparavant qu il soit; C est ce qui emporte la contradiction:
c est ce que la nature des choses ne souffre pas: c est ce qui est du tout impossible. Silhon
, p. . Trans. in ACS p. .
16 Blanchet , p. .
17 Blanchet , p. . See AT I, .
18 Blanchet , pp. .
19 S.P. is now known to have been the Sieur Pollotsee the notes at AT I, and II,
.
the cogito in the seventeenth century
Descartes added that one can conclude instead I think that I breathe,
therefore I am, in the same way that he will respond to Gassendi a few
years later that I walk therefore I am cannot be known with as great a
certainty as I think, therefore I am, or even I think that I walk, therefore
I am.22 We should note that Descartes argument is dependent on the
fact that we do not know whether we are breathing with the same kind
of certainty as we know that we are thinking and that Descartes says
nothing in response here about the certainty of every action supposes
existence.
It is ambiguous whether Silhons argument concludes I exist from
every action supposes existence and I am acting.23 But Silhon issued
a second version of his argument in (presumably written around
), which looks a bit different than the first; Silhon states:
No person with any spark of common sense, and with the slightest capa-
bility for reflection, is incapable of making this judgment about himself: I
exist, I am actually and really, and it is not true that I do not exist. Therefore,
this judgment one makes of the Existence of ones Being is so true that it
is impossible he does not exist, in the same way that it is not possible even
for Gods omnipotence that a thing which does not exist operates and acts
before it is and it exists.
20 AT I, .
21 AT II, .
22 AT VII, . Following Hobbes criticism of the res cogitans as I walk, therefore I am
a walk, in the Third set of Objections and Replies (AT VII, ), Gassendi uses I walk,
therefore I am as an example of being able to infer ones existence by means of any of
ones actions, it being manifest by the natural light that everything that acts is or exists,
Fifth Set of Objections (AT VII, ) and Disquisitio Metaphysica (Meditationem II,
Dubitatio I, art. ; Gassendi , p. ).
23 Silhon introduces his argument with: voicy une connoissance certaine, en quelque
In this way, in whatever state a man finds himself in, and whatever kind of
action occupies himwhether he affirms something, whether he denies it
or doubts of it, whether he is awake or dreamingwhether he is mistaken
or not mistaken in what he is doing, he cannot affirm, deny, or doubt, be
awake or dreaming, be mistaken or not mistaken, without actually being
and existing, following this Principle known naturally and received in
all the world, that operation supposes Being, or else that one must exist
actually when one operates.24
The structure of this argument is clearer, especially in its second para-
graph. The affirmer or doubter derives his or her existence from his or
her affirmation or doubt together with the principle that operation sup-
poses Being.
Let us assume that Silhons later version of the argument was what he
intended in the earlier version. Still, in neither version is Silhon making
the kind of claim Pollot would be making, of arguing along the lines of
I breathe, therefore I am. In both of Silhons arguments, we are dealing
with reflection, with affirmation, denial, doubting, etc.; in both, and most
clearly in the first version of the argument, we are in a situation in which
we could be dreaming and the external senses might, in themselves, be
deceptive. One cannot interpret Silhon as thinking that what is at stake
is the certainty of breathing or walking, especially when he prefaces
his argument as something being performed by someone who has the
power to enter into himself and to make a judgment. True, the argument
requires the certainty of operation supposes Being, but that principle is
more certain than I am breathing, or I am walking, and, perhaps, on
par with in order to think we must exist. If Silhon is making a mistake,
it is not the one Descartes rebuked in his letter of March .
Popkin clearly thinks that these moves of Silhon are defective against the
skeptic and thinks, in addition, that Descartes objected to his argument
directly in March or April , in a letter to an unknown correspondent,
believed to be either the Marquis of Newcastle or Silhon himself. In that
letter, Descartes thanks his correspondenta friend of hisfor his help
in the attempt to procure him a pension while he was in Paris. It is now
generally agreed that the letter was indeed to Silhon, because it is thought
that the Marquis of Newcastle, being a foreigner, would not have been in
the position to help Descartes in this way, while Silhon at the time was
secretary to Cardinal Mazarin and the major distributors of pensions
in France.27 And in the letter, Descartes does assert that the cogito is
not a work of your reasoning nor an instruction that your teachers have
given you; your mind sees it, feels it, and handles it.28 This is the specific
statement that Popkin thinks was intended as a criticism of Silhons cogito
by Descartes.
Popkin begins his account by asserting: Even in presenting his impor-
tant new answer to skepticism, the cogito, Silhon had failed to realize
either the force of what he was opposing or the crucial character of
the undeniable truth he had discovered. Descartes, in two letters that
that of the letters to the Marquis, Descartes addressing him as Vostre Excellence and
Monseigneur, whereas he addresses his correspondent as Monsieur.
28 AT V, .
chapter ten
may be about Silhons cogito, indicated what was lacking here.29 He then
quotes from the two letters, the letter about I breathe, therefore I
am and the letter about the cogito not being a work of ones rea-
soning, but something seen, felt, and handled. His analysis is that for
Descartes,
one does not arrive at the cogito on the basis of other propositions, which
are less certain and open to doubt, but one encounters the truth and force
of the cogito in itself alone. Silhon, at best, had seen that the skeptic could
not deny the cogito and hence he could not deny that something was true.
But he did not see what it was that was true, or what this might show.30
Now, it is prima facie unlikely that Descartes would be launching into
what he considered a criticism of Silhons cogito in a letter to Silhon
thanking him for his help in the attempt to procure a pension. It also
seems unlikely that Silhon would understand Descartes statement as a
criticism and then later would repeat his argument (and phrase it in such
a way that it would be even more vulnerable to such a criticism). The
question is whether Descartes assertions in the letter need to be
regarded as a criticism of Silhons cogito, even when interpreted as that the
affirmer or doubter recognizes his existence because of his affirmation or
doubt, together with a principle like whatever acts exists.
By , Descartes had already answered numerous objections to the
cogito in print; these were available for anyones perusal. In fact, given
that Descartes called the cogito the first principle of knowledge, a cottage
industry grew up to show that the cogito could not be a first principle,
that other principles are needed to be known beforehand. For example,
the authors of the Sixth Set of Objections tried such a line of attack, though
they embedded their criticism in an obscure argument within a series of
peculiar ones:
from the fact that we are thinking it does not seem entirely certain that we
exist. For in order for you to be certain that you think you ought to know
what it is to think, or what thought is, or again what your existence is. And
since you do not yet know what these things are, how can you know that
you think or that you exist? Therefore when you say I think and when
you add therefore I am do you really know what you are saying.31
The objectors go on to assert that knowing that one is saying or thinking
anything requires one to know that one knows what one is saying, which
29 Popkin , p. .
30 Ibid.
31 AT VII, .
the cogito in the seventeenth century
requires one to be aware of knowing that one knows what one is saying,
and so forth. Descartes does not find it at all difficult to deny that
the cogito requires reflective knowledge, demonstrative knowledge, or
knowledge of reflective knowledge. He does acknowledge that it is true
that no one can be certain that he is thinking or that he exists unless
he knows what thought is and what existence is.32 Still, these kinds
of objections continued. Gassendi provides a new formulation in his
Disquisitio Metaphysica: The cogito is an enthymeme that requires the
major premise he who thinks exists, and thus the cogito cannot be the
first truth discovered.33
In the Seventh Objections, Bourdin tries to expand the list of what one
needs to know in order to conclude that one exists. Not only do we need
to know what thought is, but also that dreaming entails thinking and not
vice versa, since dreaming is not identical to thinking:
I am dreaming that I am thinking. So I am not thinking.
No, you reply, if someone is dreaming, then he is thinking.
I see a ray of light. Dreaming is thinking, and thinking is dreaming.
Certainly not, you say. Thinking extends more widely than dreaming.
He who is dreaming is thinking; but he who is thinking is not dreaming
all the time, but may be thinking while awake.
But is this right? Are you dreaming it, or are you really thinking it? If you
are dreaming that thinking extends more widely, does it follow that it really
does so? . . . how do you know that thinking extends more widely than
dreaming?34
32 AT VII, .
33 Gassendi , p. , in Meditationem II, Dubitatio I, art. , p. .
34 AT VII, ; CSM II, . Bourdin understands that Descartes claims not to need
syllogisms; he says:
Your method denigrates the traditional forms of argument, and instead grows pale
with a new terror . . . If you propose any syllogism, it will be scared of the major
premise, whatever it may be. The evil demon may be deceiving us, it says. What
about the minor premise? It will tremble and call the minor premise doubtful . . .
Finally, what about the conclusion? It will run away from all conclusions as if they
were traps and snares. (AT VII, )
So Bourdins objection is actually that without syllogism, without the ability to go from
truth to truth, and without a first truth, Descartes can never break out of what seems to
him to be so into what really is so: I am thinking, you say. / I deny it; you are dreaming
that you are thinking . . . / I exist, as long as I am thinking, you say . . . This is certain
and evident, you continue. / No; you merely dream that it is certain and evident AT VII,
.
chapter ten
35 AT VII, .
36 AT VII, .
37 AT VIIIA.
the cogito in the seventeenth century
think therefore I am, the major whatever thinks is can be known; for
it is in reality prior to my conclusion and my conclusion depends on
it.38 Descartes answer to Burman was not known during the seventeenth
century. Still, there are sufficient texts published before in which
Descartes admits that the cogito, while not a syllogism, requires in some
way simple notions such as it is impossible that that which thinks should
not exist; this would not be so very different than requiring the principle
acting supposes being.39
Neither Blanchets nor Popkins criticisms of Silhon as plagiarist or as
having entirely missed the crucial nature of the cogito seem valid. As yet
unanswered is the relation between Silhons and Descartes arguments.
Are they sufficiently different, as Augustine and Descartes arguments
were said to be, such that one can still call Descartes the true author
of the cogito? Well, it does not look like Silhon makes his cogito a firm
principle, supporting an entire physics or that he uses it to show that the
self is an immaterial substance that is, to prove the distinction between
material and spiritual natures. While Silhon thinks he needs the cogito
to answer skepticism, his argument is not used materially to prove the
existence of God and the immortality of the soul. Thus Silhon would have
failed Pascals two-fold criterion.
But Silhon was not the only thinker within Descartes circle who made
use of a cogito to prove the immortality of the soul. Mersenne, in a letter
written in to the Leyden Protestant professor of theology Andr
38 AT V, .
39 Can Descartes hold that the cogito is only a simple intuitionnot a syllogism
and still require that we must first know what thought is, what existence is, and that it is
impossible that that which thinks should not exist? I think the answer, though necessarily
speculative, is yes. Descartes rejects formal logic for what one could call a material logic
(see Ariew b). So, let us consider as a paradigm of a Cartesian logical inference a
(Sellarsian) material inference, something like: Today is Tuesday. Therefore, tomorrow is
Wednesday. The material inference would be valid because of the meaning of the terms,
not because of the form of the inference. We would have to know what Tuesday and
Wednesday are, together with the sequence of the days of the week, etc. Of course, we
could always treat the material inference formally, as an enthymeme, and provide the
missing premises about Tuesday, Wednesday, tomorrow, etc. In the same way, if we are
dealing with an immediate (material) intuition I am, I exist, is true every time I utter
it or conceive it in my mind, let us sayperhaps that intuition is valid because of the
interplay between the meaning of the terms and the context of the utterance. One would
then be able to say that the intuition is not a syllogism or inference (it is not a product of
ones reasoning and it is not an enthymeme)it does not depend on the major premise
Everything that thinks existsbut that it would still require for us know what thought
and existence are, etc.
chapter ten
The Fifth Lateran Council did indeed declare that there were three most
pernicious errors corrupting the minds of the faithful, namely, that the
rational soul is mortal, that there is one rational soul for all humans,
and that these claims can be shown true according to philosophy.43 The
40 Mersenne , vol. V, p. .
41 Mersenne , vol. VII, p. .
42 AT VII, .
43 For the Thomistic background on this debate and its Surezian discussion, see
Sirmond , p. . Sirmond extends this ability of the soul to know itself without
intermediary to the separated soul and to angels: the separated soul . . . knows itself
without any means other than itself. And it is not difficult to believe that angels who
have a more penetrating eye, similarly see in their own nature, without any other aid or
impression of species, not only themselves, but many other things . . . p. . For more
on Sirmond, see also Blanchet , pp. .
chapter ten
47 L esprit qui peut oprer sans corps, peut aussi subsister de mesme. Celuy de l hom-
me peut le premier. Il peut donc aussi the second. . . . L esprit qui peut estre sans corps,
est immortel. Celui de l homme le peut. Il est donc immortel. Sirmond , p. .
48 Ds cette vie nostre ame s entend et se cognoit elle-mesme. . . . C est donc le
deburoit penser ces choses d une autre faon qu tout le reste, savoir est, non pas au
the cogito in the seventeenth century
Finally, Sirmond also asserts that Mirandulanus, that is, Pico della
Mirandola, in his Apology, used the same passage by Augustine to assert
that our soul has no actual and distinct knowledge other than itself; the
soul has a secret, direct and permanent knowledge, independent of the
senses.51
These arguments take on greater significance when one considers
that Augustines cogito lived in the seventeenth century independently
of Descartes, that it was known by at least four correspondents who
indicated to Descartes that his cogito reminded them of Augustines.52
moyen d un phantosme fourny par l imagination la maniere, que nous pensons aux
objets qui sont absents, et qui neantmoins ont autrefois frapp nos sens, soit en espce,
soit en individu; mais bien la faveur d une certaine prsence plus intime et si vritable,
qu elle n a rien de feint. Car que pourroit-on luy souhaitter de plus uny et plus prsent
qu elle mesme. Sirmond , pp. (representing Augustine, De Trinitate, X, ).
51 There has been little written about Sirmond. Most of the commentary has treated
his later treatise on La defense de la vertu (), which was criticized severely by many,
and in particular both Arnauld and Pascal (the latter in Provincial Letters, X in Pascal
). Needless to say, Sirmond has not been treated very well in the secondary literature.
Bremond begins as follows: Il y a deux Sirmond: Jacques () et Antoine
(); l oncle et le neveu; le gant et le nain, p. . There are some more even-
handed treatments of Sirmond in relation to Pascal in Jovy ; the latter also has an
interesting study of the relation between Silhon and Pascal (Jovy ). We can point
out that Sirmond entered the Jesuit Order at Rouen in and subsequently taught
humanities, rhetoric, then, philosophy, for five years, at the Jesuit College of La Flche
(roughly when Descartes was a student there). There has been no suggestion that the
eighteen-year old Descartes taught the cogito to Sirmond circa .
52 So, the question arises, how to make sense of what Descartes says to Colvius: You
have obliged me by bringing to my notice the passage of St. Augustine that bears some
relation to my I think, therefore I am. Today I have been to read it at the library of this
city, and I do indeed find that he makes use of it? Is Descartes really to be understood as
not knowing that Augustine made use of a cogito until Colvius pointed it out to him? The
exchanges between Mersenne and Descartes about the cogito can provide some clues. As
usual, we do not have Mersennes side of the letters, but must reconstruct what he said
through Descartes replies. On May , Descartes said to Mersenne I havent sent
you anything about . . . the passage from Saint Augustine, because it does not seem to me
that he makes the same use of it that I do (AT I, ). Mersenne must have referred to a
work of Augustine containing the cogito and Descartes, having general knowledge about
it gives the gist of what will be his answer to Colvius, but puts off formally responding
to Mersenne. On November , Descartes wrote to Mersenne: I have searched for
the letter in which you cited the passage of Saint Augustine, but I have not yet found it.
I also have not yet been able to get the Works of this Saint, to see, in them, what you are
asking aboutfor which I thank you (AT II, ). This is a continuation of the thread
from the previous letter; Descartes does not deny knowing something about Augustines
views, but acknowledges that he still hasnt read over his works and checked the views
expressed there against his own. It also seems that Mersenne is asking for the reference
chapter ten
to Augustine from Descartes; this makes it even clearer that Augustines works were not
so readily accessible. Finally, in December , just a month after his letter to Colvius,
Descartes writes to Mersenne: You had previously alerted me about a passage from Saint
Augustine concerning my I think therefore I am, about which you had, it seems to me,
asked me again once more; it is in the th book of On the City of God, chap. (AT III,
). We can conclude from these three fragments to Mersenne that Descartes, in the
letter to Colvius, would not be denying that he is aware of Augustines cogito, but simply
that he does not have the texts before him to check carefully so that he can speak about the
matter with authority. Once he does, his prior judgment (in his first letter to Mersenne)
is confirmed.
53 Augustines cogito was discussed and even criticized by various Jesuit theologians
asked to address briefly the questions: Why should we teach Descartes to philosophy
students? Are there any aspects of his philosophy which are still living? Four out of
five (Chappell, Gaukroger, Schmaltz, and Wagner) responded by making reference to
Descartes and epistemology: his foundationalist program in epistemology; the royal
road to problems of epistemology; the emphasis on Descartes the pure epistemologist;
and the Meditations offering a distinctive form of epistemic review. The fifth (Watson)
talked about mind-body dualism. See British Society for the History of Philosophy Newslet-
ter , pp. .
55 These principles were condemned at Louvain. See chapters and .
56 The same can be said about works generally sympathetic to Descartes philosophy
58 De la Grange , pp. .
59 Car qui croiroit que Descartes n enseigne que la vrit, et ce qui est connu claire-
ment par la lumire naturelle, lors qu il nous dit dans l article . de la seconde partie de
ses Principes, que plusieurs mondes sont impossibles. Peut-on dire quelque chose de plus
nouveau, et qui choque davantage la raison? Depuis que les hommes se mlent de raison-
ner sur les ouvrages de Dieu, il n y en a possible pas eu un, qui ait ose enseigner cette
doctrine, ou mesme qui ait este de ce sentiment. En effet, il n y a rien qui nous paraisse
plus clair et plus naturel, que de dire que Dieu ayant produit ce monde, peut bien encore
en produire un autre, de mesme qu un sculpteur qui a fait une trs-belle statue, peut bien
en faire encore une semblable. Comment est-ce que Descartes a pu avancer cette erreur?
de la Grange , pp. .
60 Ce que je trouve de plaisant, c est que Descartes enseigne hardiment des conclu-
sions trs dangereuses, qu il tire de deux principes qui ne sont point prouvez. Le pre-
mier principe qu il suppose, est que par tout il y a de l espace, il y a aussi de la matire;
parce que qui dit espace dit tendue, laquelle n est point diffrente de la matire. On
peut voir dans l articles et de la seconde partie des Principes, s il apporte une seule
the cogito in the seventeenth century
such topics as whether animals can reason, the accidents of the Eucharist,
the nature of place and void, the infinity of the world, and the possibility
of void; in his second volume, he broached the topic of the immobility
of the earth and other similar subjects. His primary motivation was the
re-establishment of the scholastics substantial forms; he did not seem
at all interested in skepticism, hyperbolic doubt, the cogito, ideas, or the
analysis of sense perception.
A visit to Descartes world, guided by the Jesuit Gabriel Daniel, imparts
the same image.61 Daniel satirized the Cartesian doctrines he found
most offensive, namely, the union of soul and body (Descartes separating
and reuniting them when he pleased); the account of motion and the
conservation of quantity of motion; the explanation of the Eucharist; the
denial of void; the acceptance of vortices and the motion of the earth; and
the irrationality of animalsthat is, Descartes btes-machines. Again, the
topics discussed in his extremely popular work62 related to metaphysics,
theology, physics or cosmology, but not to epistemology.
This is not to say, however, that all seventeenth century critiques were
exclusively about metaphysical issues. Now and then one can find bits
and pieces of the topics that might speak to more modern concerns.
Fairly typical is the rejection of Cartesianism by the Jesuits of Cler-
mont College, whose criticism is mostly aimed at the usual metaphysico-
theological suspects; one can glimpse a criticismunder the rubric of
what is distasteful to mathematicsdirected against what scholas-
tics called the classification or subalternation of the sciences, that is,
the set of doctrines discussed in conjunction with Aristotles Posterior
throws all its principles and ideas which commonsense has accepted for centuries, Old-
enburg , vol. II, p. .
the cogito in the seventeenth century
68 At non ferendus hic Cartesius, cum jubet omni alio tantispet seposito principio, ut
dubio, Mentem ab eo rerum cognitionem auspicari: Ego cogito, ex quo statim inferat: Ergo
ego sum. Nam, ut caetera non urgeam, si cum aliis omnibus nostrum etiam principium
Mens ut dubium seponat, dubium quoque erit, an, quod cogitat, sit vel non sit. Posset
enim cogitare, et tamen non esse, si possible foret, Idem esse et non esse. Iraque vel illud
ipsium Cartesii Principium, seu potius Enthymema nostro nititur principio. Goudin
[], vol. , quest. , art. , pp. . While Goudin is a Dominican (and
Thomist), interestingly enough, the same argument can be found in the works of the
Franciscan (and Scotist) Claude Frassen; see Schmutz , pp. .
69 The critique is contained in chap. , art. , pp. , of Huet (corrected
and augmented edition, Paris, ). It is interesting to note that the subtitle of the work
is: Servant d claircissement toutes les parties de la philosophie, sur tout a la mtaphysique.
On the importance of Huet to French society, see Lux . See also Malbreil .
70 Huet , chap. I, art. ; see also art. .
the cogito in the seventeenth century
71 Nec id quidem scire possumus, quin prius noverimus quid sit agere, quid esse. Ut
noscamus autem quid sit agere, noscendum est, quid sit agens, quae caussa, qui modus,
qui finis agendi. Rursum ut noscamus quid sit esse, noscendum est quid sit id quod est,
quae caussa cur sit, quomodo sit, quo fine sit. Huet , chap. I, art. .
72 Huet , chap. I, art. ; see also art. . Presumably, this element appears princi-
think, the object of his thought is his thought itself. But since a thought
cannot both be an act and the end toward which the act is referred,
Descartes thought as object is not the thought by which his mind thinks:
the thought by which Descartes thinks is different than the one about
which Descartes thinks. I think is then I think that I think, which
actually signifies I think that I thought. And, of course, Cartesians
cannot conclude therefore I exist from that.74
Huet also denies that the cogito can be a simple intuition. According
to him, If I think therefore I exist were a simple action of the mind, it
would not be true that I think would be better known than I exist.75
As evidence for the claim that I think is better known than I exist,
Huet affirms that you can deduce I exist from I think, but you cannot
deduce I think from I exist. Thus, I think must be known prior
to I exist and I think, therefore I exist cannot be a simple intuition
or action of the mind, but a progression of knowledge, the acquisition
of something unknown from something knownin other words, an
argument.
Pierre-Sylvain Rgis,76 acting as Descartes stand-in, has no difficulty
in replying to Huets critique. He denies that the cogito is an enthymeme
or that it begs the question. He asserts that Descartes has not aban-
doned his promise to doubt everything when he accepts something as
true after having examined it.77 He claims that Descartes never accepted
the general rule to hold everything as false, but merely resolved to con-
sider as false whatever appears doubtful. He distinguishes between real
doubt, arising from the nature of things, and a feigned, methodological
doubtwhat Descartes called hypothetical, hyperbolic and metaphysical
doubtarising from his resolution to doubt.78 In keeping with this inter-
pretation of Descartes, he asserts that Descartes only held the rules of
logic as false hypothetically in order to examine them. He asks rhetori-
cally: who can prevent Descartes from holding them as true, if they have
antecedentis, Ego cogito, et aliud enuntiati consequentis, Ergo sum. Vel igitur id sibi vult
ista argumentatis, Ego cogito, ergo ero; vel istud, Ego cogitari, ergo sum. Huet ,
chap. I, art. .
74 Huet , chap. I, art. .
75 Huet , chap. I, art. .
76 Author of the textbook exposition of Cartesian philosophy, Rgis , among other
works.
77 Rgis , I, art. .
78 Rgis I, art. .
the cogito in the seventeenth century
79 Rgis , I, art. .
80 AT VII, . We should add that it is also Descartes reported view in the
Conversation with Burman; see AT V, ; CSM III, .
81 Rgis , I, art. . It is interesting to note that Leibniz shares this view (taking
analysis and synthesis to correspond to order of knowledge and order of nature, respec-
tively). Leibniz, of course, is almost never interested in the cogito. In the early Letter to
Foucher [], however, he asserts: But even though the existence of necessities is the
first of all truths in and of itself and in the order of nature, I agree that it is not first in
the order of our knowledge. For you see, in order to prove their existence I took it for
granted that we think and that we have sensations. Thus there are two absolute general
truths, that is, two absolute general truths which speak of the actual existence of things:
the first, that we think, and the second, that there is a great variety in our thoughts. From
the former it follows that we exist . . . (Leibniz , p. ).
82 Rgis , I, art. .
chapter ten
For one has to note that Descartes teaches expressly that thoughts are
passions that belong to the understanding and that affirmations and
negations are actions that belong to the will.83 Rgis easily disposes of the
other objections that make the cogito temporal. He denies that I think
is equivalent to I think that I think and, thus, he does not consider
whether I think that I think actually signifies I think that I thought.
According to him, the cogito is also not temporal because there is only
one thought in it. While the meditator thinks, he/she perceives he/she
thinks by a single and simple thought, which is known by itself; otherwise
there would be an infinite progression of thoughts.84 Finally, he reaffirms
that the cogito is a simple intuition and he rejects the relevance of the
argument that one can derive therefore I exist from I think but not
vice versa: Since being is something more general than thought, . . . one
can truly conclude that something exists from the fact that it thinks, but
one cannot infer in the same way that something thinks from the fact
that it is. This is sufficient to destroy the reasoning of the author of the
Censura.85
The matter did not end there. Huet published a corrected and expan-
ded edition of his Censura in and several others published their
own replies.86 One of the more interesting of the latter kind was the
one written by Jean Duhamel, Professor Emeritus at the University of
Paris,87 who published Reflexions critiques sur le systme cartsien de la
philosophie de mr. Rgis. Duhamel devotes two of his chapters to the
cogito. After considering Huets and Rgis arguments, Duhamel comes
down squarely on Huets side. The cogito begs the question. Moreover,
it is a defective argument. Duhamel argues that one cannot separate
knowledge of ones existence from other knowledge:
The analysis of our author . . . assumes that I can separate knowledge of the
heavens, of the earth, or of the sea, from its proper object; now, it is false
that I can separate this knowledge from its object, any more than from its
83 Rgis , I, art. .
84 Rgis , I, art. .
85 Rgis , I, art. .
86 Even Leibniz wanted to take part in the eventon Huets side; see his letter to
subject, for knowledge is not less relative essentially to its object than to its
subject, a difference being no less essential than a genus.88
He also argues that, since, according to the Cartesians, God can make it
be that I think and not exist, I exist does not follow necessarily from I
think.89
But Duhamels principal interest is in denying that the proposition I
think, therefore I am is the first of all propositions known. He rejects
Rgis claim that singular propositions are known before general ones
and asserts that there are several general propositions that may be known
before I think therefore I exist, namely, everything that exists exists
necessarily while it exists, Everything that acts exists, and Everything
that thinks exists.90 He has a number of reasons for this. Direct propo-
sitions are known before reflexive propositions, because the object pre-
cedes the knowledge or idea of which it is the object.91 The general propo-
sitions he listed are direct since they refer to an external object and the
88 L analyse . . . suppose faux; car elle suppose, que je peut sparer les conoissances
du ciel, de la terre, de la mer, de leurs propres objets: or il est faux que je puisse sparer
ces conoissances de leurs objets, non plus que de leurs sujets; car ces conoissances ne sont
pas moins relatives essentiellement leurs objets, qu a leurs sujets, la diffrence n tant
pas moins essentielle, que le genre. Duhamel , chap. .
89 De plus, on soutient que, de ce que je pense, il ne s ensuit pas ncessairement que
j existe dans le principe des Cartsiens; car si Dieu peut faire que je pense et que je n existe
pas; de ce que je pense, il ne s ensuit pas ncessairement, que j existe: or Dieu peut faire
que je pense et que je n existe pas dans le principe des Cartsiens, et sur-tout de notre
Auteur, qui dit expressment: il reste donc qu il n y ait point d impossibilit avant le dcret
de Dieu, en telle sorte que quand je dis, qu il est impossible qu une chose soit et ne soit pas,
cela ne signifie autre chose, si ce n est que Dieu a voulu qu une chose fust tandis qu elle
seroit [livre , part , de sa mtaphysique, chap. ]; ce qui prouve sans commentaire,
que si Dieu vouloit par une volont ternelle, ainsi qu il veut autres choses qu il veut,
il seroit possible qu une chose fut et ne fut pas; plus forte raison, qu elle pensast et
qu elle n existast pas. Donc de ce que je pense, il ne s ensuit pas ncessairement, dans les
principes des Cartsiens, que j existe. Duhamel , chap. .
90 On soutient au contraire, qu il y a plusieurs propositions qui peuvent tre connues
avant celle-cy, et notamment que ces propositions gnrales, Tout ce qui existe, existe
ncessairement pendant qu il existe: Tout ce qui agit, existe: Tout ce qui pense, existe,
peuvent tre connues avant elle. Duhamel , chap. .
91 It is interesting to compare the above to the post-Cartesian pronouncements of
92 Duhamel , chap. . Here is Duhamels full argument: Parce que les proposi-
tions directes sont connues avant les rflexes, ce qui est connu directement, est plutost
connu, que ce qui est connu par rflexion; car l objet prcde la connoissance ou l ide
dont il est l objet, et la connoissance directe est l objet de la rflexe: or les propositions
gnrales, cy devant rapportes, sont directes, puisqu elles tendent un objet extrieur, et
qui est en dehors de nous; car l existence, l action, et la pense des autres de nous, est un
objet extrieur; au contraire cette proposition, je pense, donc je suis, est rflexe, puisqu elle
a pour objet la pense et l existence, qui est en nous mmes, et partant les propositions
gnrales cy devant rapportes, prcdent cette proposition particulire, je pense, donc je
suis.
93 Parce que les propositions gnrales supposent la vrit quelques propositions
singulires; mais il est certain qu elles ne supposent pas toutes les propositions sin-
gulires: autrement les propositions gnrales exigeroient l induction de toutes les parti-
culires sans exception, ce qui est reconnu pour faux en matire ncessaire, dont il s agit.
Duhamel , chap. .
94 Intellectus prius cognoscit res alias quam seipsum. Ratio est, quia cognitio directa
prior est quam reflexa; intellectus autem cogniscit res alias a se directa cognitione:
seipsum vero nonnisi reflexa . . . Intellectus prius cognoscit substantias materiales, quam
immateriales et spirituales . . . Intellectus prius cognoscit composita substantialia, quam
ipsorum partes aut differentias. Ratio est, quia cognitio confusa distinctam antecedit;
ipsa autem composita cognoscuntur primo confusa cognitione, partes autem non nisi
distincta . . . Accidentia prius cognoscuntur quam substantiae. Ratio est, quia accidentia
sensibus patent ut plurimum; substantiae vero latent, nec sunt per se sensibiles, ideoque
non tam cito nec tam facile cognoscibiles. Eustachius , Physica, Pars III, Tract. ,
disp. , quaest. .
the cogito in the seventeenth century
95 Duhamel , chap. . Here is Duhamel's full argument: Parce que celuy qui con-
noit les autres propositions connoissoit ncessairement et essentiellement connoissance
d elle-mme: or il est impossible que la mme conoissance soit essentiellement conois-
sance d elle-mme, car en ce cas l action agiroit sur elle-mme, ou la passion recevroit
d elle-mme, puisque la conoissance est une action ou une passion: or il est impossible
qu une mme action ou passion indivisiblement agisse sur elle-mme, ou reoive d elle-
mme; et partant la conoissance, moins qu elle ne soit infinie dans le genre de conois-
sance ne peut tre conoissance, d elle-mme.
Une mme conoissance ne peut avoir deux objets formels differens: or si la conois-
sance d un objet extrieur toit conoissance d elle mme, elle auroit deux objets formels
differens, savoir l objet extrieur directement connu, et de plus elle-mme pour objet
intrieur connu par rflexion; et par consquent la conoissance d un objet extrieur, ne
peut tre conoissance d elle-mme.
96 Il est vray que quand je dis je connois, je pense, ce je suppose mon existence, car
dans le fond mon existence et ma pense font une mesme chose; mais cela n empesche pas
que je ne puisse dire sans contradiction que dans cette proposition je pense ce je signifie
la pense avant qu il signifie l existence, par la raison que je connois l existence par la
pense, et que je ne connois pas reciproquement la pense par l existence; ce qui suffit
pour eviter une petition de principe qui consiste prouver une chose par elle-mesme,
considere en la mesme maniere, comme je l ai expliqu dans la reponse la censure de
la phiosophie cartesienne, chap. , art. & . Rgis , chap. .
97 j avou que les ides ne sont pas moins relative essentiellement leurs objets
qu leurs sujets; mais avec cette difference, que la relation qu ils ont avec leurs objets
considerez entant qu existans, n est que contingente et accidentelle. Car il arrive souvent
que nous avons des ides dont l objet n existe pas actuellement, et comme l on dit a
parte rei: au lieu que la relation de nos connoissances leurs sujets actuellement existans
est necessaire et absolu, n estant pas possible de concevoir, qu une connoissance existe
separe d un sujet qui connoit actuellement, et qui est par consequent existant. Ainsi ce
n est par merveille, si voulant dduire mon existence de l existence de mes connoissances,
j ay pltot consider mes coinnaissances par rapport a leur sujet, que par rapport a leur
chapter ten
that the cogito does not follow necessarily given that God can make
something think and not exist while it is thinking, denying that God
can do such a thing.98 On the question of whether the cogito is the
first proposition known, he simply referred the reader to his previous
response to Huet99 (as he did for all questions about Cartesian doubt).
We should note that Descartes replied to this criticism in advance and
more forcefully than did Rgis. According to Descartes, there are two
senses of the word principle: It is one thing to seek for a common notion
so clear and so general that it can serve as principle for proving the
existence of all beings, or entities, that are yet to be known, such as it
is impossible for the same thing to be and not to be at the same time,
and another to search for a being whose existence is better known to us
than that of any other, so that it can serve as principle for our knowledge
of them.100
The debate continued; but we do not have to continue. Rather, we
should ask: what does this all signify? Are these all simply atrocious
arguments from awful philosophers? Perhaps, but most of these argu-
ments have been repeated, in some guise or another, by philosophers
objet; puisque le rapport qu elles ont avec celuy-cy, consider comme existant, n est
que contingent et accidentel, et que le rapport qu elles ont avce l autre, est absolu et
necessaire. Rgis , chap. .
98 Les cartesiens n ont point tably de principe duquel il s ensuive que Dieu puisse
faire que je pense et que je ne soit pas: il est vray que j ai dit dans la Metaphysique liv.
, part ., chap. . qu il n y a point d impossibilit avant le decret de Dieu, mais cela
ne veut pas dire que Dieu puisse faire les choses absolument impossibles, comme, que je
pense et que je ne suis pas, tandis que je pense; car au contraire c est par l que j ai prouv
qu il ne les peut pas faire, parce que s il les pouvait faire, il se pourrait contredire; ce qui
repugne l ide d un estre parfait. Rgis , chap. .
99 Comme les raisons que M. du Hamel; apporte pour prouver que cette proposition:
je pense, donc je suis, n est pas la premiere proposition, sont les mesmes que l Auteur de
la Censure de la philosophie Cartsienne a proposes dans le art. du . chap. M. du
Hamel nous premettra de la renvoyer la Rponse qui a est faite sur cet article. Rgis
, chap. .
100 To Clerselier, June or July , AT IV, . Descartes continues: In the first
sense, it can be said that it is impossible for the same thing to be and not to be at the same
time, is a principle. It can serve, in general, not strictly to make known the existence of
anything, but only to bring it about that, when we know it, we confirm its truth by such
reasoning: It is impossible that what is, is not; and I know that a certain thing is; hence
I know that it is impossible for it not to be. This has very little importance and does not
make us any the wiser. In the other sense, the first principle is that our soul exists, since
there is nothing whose existence is better known to us. We should note that the argument
is not lost on all seventeenth century authors; see the Metaphysica of Nicholas Lenfant,
as reported by Jacob Schmutz, in , pp. .
the cogito in the seventeenth century
101 Other than Gassendis separately published Disquisitio Metaphysica. For more on
say rejectedthe cogito as well. Tad Schmaltz in his Radical Cartesians () depicts
the views of Robert Desgabets and Regis (propounding his own views) as defend-
ing three principal, ostensibly non-Cartesian theses: ) the indefectibility or inde-
structibility of matter, ) realism about the representative contents of ideas, and )
a tight union of mind and body such that even pure thoughts require bodily pro-
cesses. Adopting these theses undermined other Cartesian doctrines as well. As a con-
sequence, they abandon the method of doubt, adopt fallibilism and a kind of empiri-
cism, and reinterpret the cogito; they reject the proposition that the mind is better
known than the body. Desgabets argues that since the idea we have of our soul is
only a representation, and if every idea did not necessarily have an existing object,
then we could not conclude that we exist from the fact that we have an idea of our-
selves, even when we have one. (Rponse . . . touchant l tre objectif, Desgabets ,
p. ) The cogito could only prove that I am an objective being, not that I am a sub-
stance. You can find similar views in Malebranches Search After Truth III.II. (,
the cogito in the seventeenth century
would reject the method of doubt (as the ability to examine things one
doubts, even the most evident things, and become certain about them).
Such a skeptic, Huet for example, would naturally also reject the cog-
ito. Ultimately, the case of Huet should prevent us from speaking too
readily of a crucial divide between scholastics, with their metaphysico-
theological leanings, and moderns, with their interest in doubt and self-
awareness. But we already knew that such a dichotomy would be sim-
plistic, since many of the figures we count as moderns share what we
perceive as the scholastics metaphysico-theological leanings. We rank
Leibniz and Spinoza as modern. They were endlessly fascinated and
repelled by Descartes philosophy, but, as we have said, they were not
much interested in doubt and the cogito.107
vol. I, pp. ) and with Malebranchistes such as Franois de Lanion (see Lan-
ion ); see also the discussion of the cogito by the Oratorian, Bernard Lamy, in
chap. .
107 For Leibniz on the cogito, see notes and above. There is the following inter-
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Accidents, , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , ,
, , , , Armogathe, J.-R., ,
, , , , , Arnauld, Antoine, , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , , ,
Acquaviva, Claudio, , , , , , , ,
Actuality, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Albert of Saxony, , , Astronomy, , , , , ,
Andr, Yves Marie, , . See also Comets; Novas;
Angels, , , , , , , , Sunspots
Atomism/atoms, , , , ,
Anti-Aristotelians, , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
Aquinas, Thomas, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , . See also Basso, Sebastien;
, , , , , Corpuscularianism
, , , , , Aubrey, John,
, , , , , , Augmentation and diminution,
. See also Thomism , , , ,
Argentr, Charles Franois Dup- Augustine, , , ,
lessis d, , , , ,
Aristotelians/Aristotelianism, , ,
, , , , , Autrecourt, Nicholas,
, , , , , , , Averros, , , , ,
, , , , ,
, , , ,
, , , , , Babin, Franois,
, , , , , , Bacon, Francis, , ,
, , , , , , Baillet, Adrien, , ,
, , , , , , , Barlaeus, Caspar,
, Barrant, Comte de,
Aristotle, , , , , , Basso, Sebastian, , , ,
, , , , , ,
, , , , , Bayle, Franois, , , ,
, , , ,
, , , , , Bayle, Pierre, , , , ,
, , , , ,
, , , , Beck, L.J.,
index
Copernicanism/Copernicus, Ether, , , , ,
Nicholas, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , . See also
Cordemoy, Grauld de, , , , Elements
, Eucharist, , , , , ,
Corpuscularianism, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
. See also Atomism; Basso, , , , ,
Sebastian . See also Transubstantiation
Council of Trent, , , , Eustachius a Sancto Paulo, , , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
Cousin, Victor, , , , , , ,
Crassot, Jean, , , , , , , , ,
Cremonini, Cesare, , , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Dalbiez, Roland, , ,
Daniel, Gabriel, Exemplars, , , ,
Democritus, , , , , Extension, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , ,
Derodon, David, , , , , ,
Desgabets, Robert, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
Distinctions, theory of, , , , ,
Doubt, Cartesian, , , , , Fabri, Honor, , ,
, , , , , Faith, , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , ,
Dualism, , , , , , , , ,
Du Chevreul, Jacques, , ,
, , , , , Feyens, Thomas, ,
Fonseca, Petrus, ,
Duhamel, Jean, , , , , , Form, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Duhem, Pierre, , , ,
Du Moulin, Pierre, , , , , , ,
Dupleix, Scipion, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , ,
Durandus a Sancto Porciano, , , , , ,
Du Roure, Jacques, , . See also Ideas; Matter; Place;
Substance
Elements, , , , , , , Formal concept, , , ,
, , , , , ,
, , , , Formal distinction, , , , ,
, , , . See also , ,
Ether Frey, J.-C., , ,
index
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , . See also , , , ,
Collge de Clermont; La Flche , , , ,
Jolley, Nicholas, , , , , , ,
Judgment, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
. See also Form
Kepler, Johann, Mechanical philosophy, , , ,
, , . See also
La Flche, , , , , , , , Atomism; Corpuscularianism
, , , , , , Mercenarius, Angelus,
, , . See also Jesuits Mersenne, Marin, , , ,
Lamy (or LAmy), Bernard, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
Lateran Council, Fifth, , , , , ,
Launoy, Jean de, , , , , ,
Le Bossu, Ren, , ,
Le Grand, Antoine, , Mesland, Denis
Leibniz, G.W., , , , , , , Metaphysics, , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , ,
Lembo, Giovanni Paolo, , , , , , ,
Leo X, , , , , , , ,
Leo XIII, , , , ,
Le Res, Franois, , Minima naturalia, , ,
Lesclache, Louis de, Montaigne, Michel de, ,
Locke, John, , , Morin, Jean Baptiste, , , ,
Logic, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , Mutation, , , ,
, , , . See also Corruption;
Louis XI, Generation and Corruption
Louis XIV,
Loyola, Ignatius of, , , Nicholas of Cusa,
Nicole, Pierre, ,
Magnus, Albertus, Nol, Etienne, , ,
Maignan, Emanuel, , , Normore, Calvin,
Malcote, Odo, Novas, , , ,
Malebranche, Nicolas, , , , Novatores, , , ,
, , ,
Marion, Jean-Luc, , Objective concept, , , ,
Material falsity, , ,
Mathematics, , , , , , , , Ockham, William of/Ockhamists,
, , , , , , , , , ,
Matter, , , , , , , Oratorians, , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
, , , , , Ovid,
index
Souls, , , , , , Thomism, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , . See also Aquinas,
, , , , , , Thomas.
, , , , , Time, , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Space, , , , , , Toletus, Franciscus, , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
. See also Place. Tournemine, Jean, ,
Species, , , , , Transubstantiation, , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , , ,
, ,
Spinoza, Baruch, , , , Tremblay, Ignace de,
Surez, Francisco, , , , Ubi, , ,
, , , , , , Ultimate sphere (heaven), ,
, , Universe, , , , , , , ,
Substance, , , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , . See also
, , , , , Astronomy.
, , , , , University of Frankener,
, , , , University of Louvain, , , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
Subtle matter, , , University of Paris, , , ,
Sunspots, , , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
Syncategorematic infinite, , , , , , ,
, , , , , ,
Tamburini, Michel-Angelo, , Utrecht University, , , ,
Tarin, Jean,
Telescope, , , ,
, , , Vacuum/Void, , , , , , ,
Theology, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
, , , , , Valois, Pre de. See Louis de la Ville
, Vasquez, Gabriel,
index