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Descartes' theory of judgement

warranted assertions, the key to science

Elodie Cassan

pp. 39-47

The presence of the concept of judgement in many parts of Descartes' philosophy, methodology, metaphysics and morals has been widely remarked upon. But the reason why judgement is all-pervasive in Descartes' work has not been elucidated. This is the issue at stake in the present study of the nature and the function of the concept of judgement in the Regulae ad directionem ingenii, a text Descartes is likely to have been working on from 1618 to 1628 and which was not published during his lifetime. The Regulae, which belong to the earliest strata of Descartes' work, constitute the starting point not only of Descartes' scientific thought but also of his philosophy in general.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-5137-8_4

Full citation:

Cassan, E. (2013)., Descartes' theory of judgement: warranted assertions, the key to science, in M. Van Der Schaar (ed.), Judgement and the epistemic foundation of logic, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 39-47.

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