Res extensa: Difference between revisions
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{{a|latin|{{image|Rene Descartes|jpg|A thinking thing, yesterday.|}}}}A juicy | {{a|latin|{{image|Rene Descartes|jpg|A thinking thing, yesterday.|}}}}A juicy [[Latin}}ism that hails not from the dusty halls of nineteenth century jurisprudence but the even dustier ones of ''seventeenth'' century {{t|metaphysics]]. [[Res extensa]] is — per [[Des Carter]], stuff that’s out there in the world, the existence of which depends on your frail perceptual apparatus, and may be contrasted with [[res cogitans]] — stuff that is only in your head, such as famously, one’s knowledge of one’s own existence. That one ''cannot'' plausibly doubt, because it needs to be true — that is, one needs to exist — for one to doubt it in the first place NOW GET ON WITH YOUR WORK AND STOP TRYING TO DISTRACT ME BLENKINSOP MINOR | ||
{{c|Philosophy}} | {{c|Philosophy}} | ||
{{sa}} | {{sa}} |
Latest revision as of 11:48, 13 August 2024
The JC’s guide to pithy Latin adages
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A juicy [[Latin}}ism that hails not from the dusty halls of nineteenth century jurisprudence but the even dustier ones of seventeenth century {{t|metaphysics]]. Res extensa is — per Des Carter, stuff that’s out there in the world, the existence of which depends on your frail perceptual apparatus, and may be contrasted with res cogitans — stuff that is only in your head, such as famously, one’s knowledge of one’s own existence. That one cannot plausibly doubt, because it needs to be true — that is, one needs to exist — for one to doubt it in the first place NOW GET ON WITH YOUR WORK AND STOP TRYING TO DISTRACT ME BLENKINSOP MINOR