Essays on Descartes

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This is a collection of Paul Hoffman's wide-ranging essays on Descartes composed over the past twenty-five years. The essays in Part I include his celebrated "The Unity of Descartes' Man," in which he argues that Descartes accepts the Aristotelian view that soul and body are related as form to matter and that the human being is a substance; a series of subsequent essays elaborating on this interpretation and defending it against objections; and an essay on Descartes' theory of distinction. In the essays in Part II he argues that Descartes retains the Aristotelian theory of causation according to which an agent's action is the same as the passion it brings about, and explains the significance of this doctrine for understanding Descartes' dualism and physics. In the essays in Part III he argues that Descartes accepts the Aristotelian theory of cognition according to which perception is possible because things that exist in the world are also capable of a different way of existing in the soul, and he shows how this theory figures in Descartes' account of misrepresentation and in the controversy over whether Descartes is a direct realist or a representationalist. The essays in Part IV examine Descartes' theory of the passions of the soul: their definition; their effect on our happiness, virtue, and freedom; and methods of controlling them.

Author(s): Paul Hoffman
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 2009

Language: English
Pages: 295

Contents......Page 10
Abbreviations of Editions of Descartes’s Works......Page 12
Introduction......Page 16
PART ONE: Hylomorphism and the Theory of Distinction......Page 26
ONE: The Unity of Descartes’s Man......Page 28
TWO: Cartesian Composites......Page 46
THREE: Descartes’s Theory of Distinction......Page 64
FOUR: Descartes’s Watch Analogy......Page 84
FIVE: The Union and Interaction of Mind and Body (Part 1)......Page 90
SIX: Descartes and Aquinas on Per Se Subsistence and the Union of Soul and Body......Page 101
PART TWO: Causation......Page 112
SEVEN: The Union and Interaction of Mind and Body (Part 2)......Page 114
EIGHT: Cartesian Passions and Cartesian Dualism......Page 118
NINE: Passion and Motion in the New Mechanics......Page 138
PART THREE: Cognition......Page 156
TEN: Descartes on Misrepresentation......Page 158
ELEVEN: Direct Realism, Intentionality, and the Objective Being of Ideas......Page 177
PART FOUR: Moral Psychology......Page 190
TWELVE: Three Dualist Theories of the Passions......Page 192
THIRTEEN: Freedom and Strength of Will: Descartes and Albritton......Page 209
FOURTEEN: The Passions and Freedom of Will......Page 223
Notes......Page 250
A......Page 284
C......Page 285
D......Page 286
F......Page 287
H......Page 288
J......Page 289
M......Page 290
O......Page 291
P......Page 292
S......Page 293
T......Page 294
Y......Page 295