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The
Last Catholic Philosopher
It is striking that in his instructional handbook and
systematic summary, the
Principes de la philosophie, Descartes should
remark that the object of first philosophy, and indeed of all scientific
knowledge, should be an awareness of how to live well, to lead good life
directed by sagesse. It is striking because Descartes nowhere states
any findings as to what a sage mode of existence may be (There is
much textual evidence to the effect that Descartes counted understanding and
believing clear and distinct truths and what can be deduced from those
truths as at least part of proper behavior). In fact he
rarely addresses moral issues at all. Descartes does refer to a “most
perfect morality” and a “high degree of wisdom” that presupposes a complete
knowledge of (all?) the other sciences (p. 566). However, he does not tell
us what such a supreme morality would look like, what would be its
imperatives (or whether it would even contain any imperatives).
I suggest that the reason for this is
Descartes’ Catholicism (even though most of
his intellectual compeers adhered to the eventually suppressed Jansenist
brand of Catholicism). The specifics of morality were already adequately
spelled out in the Ten Commandments and various conciliar and papal
pronunciamentos. As long as he got as far as the existence of a
benevolent God, perhaps
the specifics of morality would follow. These must have seemed so obvious to
Descartes that he could counsel the student wishing to embark on first
philosophy to first form for himself a morality to regulate the actions of
his life (p.565) before even trying the adventure of doubt. In fact,
throwing caution to the wind, he explicitly submits his findings to the
authority of the Church (p. 670). Clearly
Descartes did not feel the uncertainties about proper behavior that awoke
with the Renaissance and evoked the alternative moralities of Castiglione,
Machiavelli and Bacon.
For this reason the
condemnation of Cartesianism by the Catholic Church in 1663 amounted to
a refusal by Descartes’ Church to fill the lacuna between the proof of the
existence of a benevolent God and a canon of beliefs and moral precepts.
This event has greater significance than notoriety because it effectively
severed relations between Catholicism and anything approaching rigorous
philosophy. And, despite the nearly contemporaneous condemnation of
Descartes by the
Protestant University of Leyden, those philosophers after Descartes who
chose to have anything to do with religion at all invariably selected
Protestant teachings as their point of reference.
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