|
Discourse on Method
The
Immateriality of the Soul
In the
Discours de la méthode, Descartes
includes a proof of the immateriality of the soul that does not seem to be
included
in the
Méditations.
His words are:
(1) …si j’eusse seulement cessé de penser, encore que
tout le reste de ce que j’avais imaginé eût été vrai, je n’avais aucune
raison de croire que j’eusse été….
Which is immediately followed by:
(2) …je connus de là que j’étais une substance dont
toute l’essence ou la nature n’est que de penser, et qui, pour être, n’a
besoin d’aucun lieu, ni dépend d’aucune chose matérielle. (p. 148)
What appears to differentiate this argument from
anything in the Meditations is that it contains a unique reason for
the conclusion that the soul is immaterial. Descartes (His meaning is
ambiguous) asserts either that when we are not thinking we cannot prove that
we exist, or that we cannot prove that we exist when (i.e. at those times
when) we are not thinking. Whichever of these two premises he really intends
by (1), he concludes from it that we are our thinking and so immaterial.
Now (1) can mean any one of several different things
(It is confusing because of mixed moods: Two indicatives rub shoulders with
three subjunctives). It can mean:
(1a) If I cease to think, then I have no reason to
believe that I exist.
Or it can mean:
(1b) When I cease to think, then I have no reason to
believe that I exist.
Or:
(1c) I have no reason to believe that I exist on those
occasions when I do not think.
Or:
(1d) I have no reason to believe that I exist if I do
not think.
None of these possible meanings of (1) follow from the
strict argument of the Cogito unless Descartes means that I have no reason
to believe that I continue to exist if I cease to think. For, once I follow
and accept the argument of the Cogito, then I have, by that argument, reason
to believe that I exist (or existed) whether or not I cease to think after I
have followed and accepted the argument of the Cogito. I may not know that I
have reason to believe that I exist(ed), because I am not thinking, but that
does not mean that I don’t have reason to believe that I exist(ed). (In the
final accounting, (1) introduces a temporal element that, because the Cogito
is enunciated without temporal reference, actually invalidates the Cogito
for any time that I am not actually concentrating on and accepting
the argument. Even if the Cogito were to prove that I exist now, it does not
prove that I existed yesterday.)
But, even assuming that (1) follows from the Cogito,
(2) does not follow from (1), for (2) is a much stronger claim than (1). (1)
simply states that I am a thing that has no reason to believe that it exists
except when it thinks. (2) states that I am essentially a thinking thing and
goes on to say that I would continue to exist even if every aspect of my
materiality were to be taken away. The actual conclusion of the Cogito is
much weaker than that. It states that I have no certain knowledge
that I am material even when I think. (2), however, states that I have
certain knowledge that I am not material because I can doubt that I am
material. To get from the Cogito to (2) you have to accept the obviously
unacceptable view that for all propositions, p, if I do not have certain
knowledge that p, then p is false. In other words, I may be thinking matter,
but I just don’t have indubitable proof that I am thinking matter. In other
words,
(3) I can’t be sure that I am material even when I
think,
does not entail:
(4) I am not material even when I think.
Finally, the version of the argument for the
non-materiality of the soul in the Discourse goes from
(5) I can’t be sure that I exist if (when) I don’t
think
to
(6) I don’t exist if (when) I don’t think.
But clearly (5) does not entail (6).
|