Descartes' First Meditations

Descartes notices that over the course of his life, he has occasionally accepted some false beliefs, and their falsity has infected other beliefs that he based upon them. What he wants to do is to sort through all his beliefs, set aside all the questionable ones, and to find some beliefs that he can trust as a perfectly secure foundation: some beliefs whose truth is beyond all doubt.

Many of Descartes' beliefs are based on his senses. So he begins by asking whether he should trust his sensory beliefs. Or is it possible to doubt whether these beliefs are true?

  1. Well, he starts off by noticing that when the viewing conditions are poor, it's very easy for his senses to mislead him. Like if the lighting is poor, or the objects are too small or too far away to see properly. That gives Descartes a reason to doubt some of his sensory beliefs, ones he forms when the viewing conditions are poor. However, it's not a reason to doubt all of his sensory beliefs. Perhaps his other sensory beliefs are OK and can be trusted. At least, nothing has so far proven that they're not OK.
  2. Then there's a perhaps more threatening doubt, that he may be insane. Descartes sets this doubt aside; I'm not sure why he thinks he's entitled to do so.
  3. Then Descartes remembers that sometimes when he is dreaming, he falsely believes that he's awake. And, reflecting on this, Descartes thinks he can't ever tell whether or not he's dreaming: How can he know that he is really perceiving his hands right now? Maybe it's all just a dream. If it were a dream, everything would seem just the same.

    Well maybe, someone would respond, you can tell you're not dreaming by pinching yourself, or seeing that your eyes are open:

    ...at the moment my eyes are certainly wide awake when I look at this piece of paper; I shake my head and it is not asleep; as I stretch out and feel my hand I do so deliberately, and I know what I am doing. All this would not happen with such distinctness to someone asleep.

    To this Descartes responds:

    Indeed! As if I did not remember other occasions when I have been tricked by exactly similar thoughts while asleep! As I think about it more carefully, I see plainly that there are never any sure signs by means of which being awake can be distinguished from being asleep.

    Here Descartes' point seems to be that for any experience you may have, no matter how much it seems to indicate that you are awake, it would also be possible for you to have that experience while dreaming. So there is no test you can use to determine whether or not you are dreaming. No matter what test you appeal to, the possibility will always remain open that you are merely dreaming that you have performed the test, and that it delivered the results it did. So according to Descartes' argument here, you can't ever tell whether or not you're really awake.

    The position Descartes is arguing for here is a lot like the predicament that people inside The Matrix are in. Their experiences seem perfectly real to them. They can't tell that it's all just a computer-generated illusion being pumped into their brains. At one point in that movie, the character Morpheus says: "Have you ever had a dream, Neo, that you were so sure was real? What if you were unable to wake from that dream? How would you know the difference between the dream world and the real world?"

    Descartes thinks these considerations about dreaming give him reason to doubt all of his sensory beliefs, even ones where there seems to be ample lighting, where the objects seem to be close by, and so on. However, there are a number of beliefs that the dreaming argument leaves unchallenged. When we dream, although the particular beliefs we form ("There's a fire-breathing crocodile chasing me") are often false, the materials for our dream (fire, crocodiles, physical objects) derive from things we experience when waking, and we can still rest assured that some things of those kinds exist. So the dreaming argument leaves unchallenged our belief in general truths about the world (the belief that there are physical objects, that they move in such-and-such ways, etc.) Also, the dreaming argument does not give Descartes reason to doubt his beliefs about mathematics and the like.

  4. So Descartes goes on looking for yet a further ground for doubt. He thinks, God would be powerful enough to cause all of his sense experiences and mathematical reasoning to be false. He's not assuming that God does exist; he's just saying that, as he understand the concept of God, this would be something that God could do if he existed. Note that he's not assuming that God would have the power to "change math" or anything like that; just that God would have the power to make some mathematical falsehoods seem true to Descartes, even when as matter of mathematical fact they're false.

    At this point Descartes makes two important moves:

    1. He considers the objection that, as he understands the concept of God, God would also be supremely good; and wouldn't his goodness prevent him from engaging in such a radical deception? Descartes responds to this objection:
      If however it were repugnant to the goodness of the Diety to have created me subject to constant deception, it would seem likewise contrary to his goodness to allow me to be occasionally deceived; and yet it is clear that this is permitted.

      The argument Descartes is giving here assumes that there is no relevant difference between occasional deception and radical deception, so that if God could permit occasional deception (which, if he exists, he does), he could also permit radical deception. (Later in the Meditations, Descartes will come back to this assumption and he will eventually reject it.)

    2. The second thing Descartes does here is present a dilemma: if he has been produced by God, then God is certainly powerful enough, and---if the previous argument is sound---might be willing to make Descartes the victim of a constant and radical deception. If, on the other hand, he was not produced by God but by fate or chance or something like that, then that's compatible with his nature being defective enough also to allow him to be constantly deceived. Either way, he could be wrong about everything.
    Descartes will eventually argue that he was created by God, and he will argue that although it is compatible with God's goodness to allow Descartes to occasionally be deceived, it is not compatible with God's goodness to allow Descartes to be constantly and irremediably deceived, or to be radically deceived about the existence of physical objects and the like. We're not going to be reading those parts of the Meditations.

At the end of Meditation 1, Descartes conjures up the image of a malevolent demon or spirit, a creature exceedingly powerful, but (unlike God) bent on deception. Descartes does not base any doubts on the existence of such a creature; for he does not already believe that such a creature exists. Nor did he already believe that it was even possible for such a creature to exist. Rather, the demon represents the outcome of his previous doubts. All of Descartes' beliefs seem up for grabs. Unless---unless he can manage to find some beliefs that he could hold on to even while accepting the demon hypothesis. If he could find something which he knows to be true even if an incredibly powerful demon is trying to deceive him, then he start to pull himself out of the pit of doubt in which he now seems trapped.