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Descartes' Deontological Turn
Reason, Will, and Virtue in the Later Writings
This book reconsiders the place that the will occupies in Descartes' mature epistemology and ethics.
Noa Naaman-Zauderer (Author)
9781107692077, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 September 2013
238 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm, 0.33 kg
'[This book's] thorough presentation of current English-language Descartes scholarship on a wide range of topics and its careful collation of numerous passages relevant to the topics of error,freedom, and ethics should make [it] useful to Descartes scholars and especially to graduate students.' Sean Greenberg, University of California, Irvine
This book offers a way of approaching the place of the will in Descartes' mature epistemology and ethics. Departing from the widely accepted view, Noa Naaman-Zauderer suggests that Descartes regards the will, rather than the intellect, as the most significant mark of human rationality, both intellectual and practical. Through a close reading of Cartesian texts from the Meditations onward, she brings to light a deontological and non-consequentialist dimension of Descartes' later thinking, which credits the proper use of free will with a constitutive, evaluative role. She shows that the right use of free will, to which Descartes assigns obligatory force, constitutes for him an end in its own right rather than merely a means for attaining any other end, however valuable. Her important study has significant implications for the unity of Descartes' thinking, and for the issue of responsibility, inviting scholars to reassess Descartes' philosophical legacy.
Preface
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Looking inward: truth, falsehood, and clear and distinct ideas
2. Error in judgment
3. Free will
4. Free will and the likeness to God
5. From intellectual to practical reason
6. Descartes' deontological ethics of virtue
References
Index.
Subject Areas: History of Western philosophy [HPC]
