Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
Descartes: The Solitary Self
Individualism is one of the hallmarks of Western philosophy and civilization.
No other intellectual tradition has been as intensively (some would say: excessively)
preoccupied with singling out and defining the individual self than Western
philosophy, and no other polity has made the presumed rights and prerogatives
of the individual as central a concern as Western societies. Individualism is
as defining a characteristic of our present civilization as capitalism, materialism,
technology, and global expansion.
Socrates’ work and example were an important beginning of this individualistic
legacy. Socrates’ inner independence from the community in which he lived
set an important precedent for the way in which a person could conceive of himself
or herself as a separate and distinct being. However radical Socrates’
individualism was, however, he never ceased to think of himself as a member
of a community. His very individualism was defined as a social role (as his
self-conception as Athens’ “gadfly” clearly shows). And no
Greek philosopher in Antiquity ever thought of the individual as anything else
than a social being, a zoon politicon.
This became different at the beginning of the Modern Age. Modern philosophy
developed a concept of the individual that was far more solitary than that created
by Socrates and Antiquity. The modern definition of the self disregards any
reference to society or social context and fastens exclusively on what the self
is in itself. Because of this approach to understanding and defining the self,
modern philosophy ended up with a conception of an individual that was besieged
by the problem of solipsism and the question of how a person could possibly
relate to the outside world.
The philosopher who first formulated the idea of this solitary self was Rene
Descartes (1596-1650). It is because of his groundbreaking work in this respect
that he has become known as “the father of modern philosophy.” To
understand why Descartes felt compelled to develop his radical individualism,
it will be helpful to take a look at the general situation of his time.
The Modern Age came into being around 1500 CE--give or take a hundred years.
The thousand years or so before that time are called the Middle Ages, and they
are sometimes characterized as the "Dark Age." The transitional years
that followed the Middle Ages brought about enormous changes in all areas of
life. Four major events and developments stand out: The Renaissance, the Reformation,
the change from agrarian Feudalism to urban Capitalism, and the discovery and
conquest of overseas territories and peoples.
The word "Renaissance" means "re-birth," and the term refers
to the rediscovery and re-activation of much of the sophisticated pagan culture
of Antiquity that had been suppressed by the Catholicism of the Middle Ages.
It was characterized foremost by a new worldliness of life. The earth was not
seen as a vale of tears anymore, but as a place where it was “a pleasure
to live.” Renaissance men and women did not think of the physical world
as merely transitory and insignificant in comparison with life after death,
but as a cosmos that deserved their full attention and admiration. The naked
human body became a prominent subject of Renaissance painting and sculpture.
Painters and art patrons did not think of it as sinful and in need of being
covered up, but as something to be respected and cherished. Science, too, turned
to the physical world with renewed energy and curiosity. The trailblazing discoveries,
theories, and inventions of Galileo Galilei, together with the physicist’s
opposition to traditional church teachings, can be seen as typical and representative
of the growing secularization of the European mind.
The new worldliness became prevalent in other areas of life as well. Political
power throughout the Middle Ages was sanctioned by the Catholic church, and
in theory at least was tempered by carefully delineated moral obligations toward
God and citizens. During the Renaissance power tended to become a purely worldly
affair, and a desirable goal in itself. In his notorious book The Prince,
written in 1513, Machiavelli advocated openly that in the art of ruling efficiency
has to be more important than ethics, and that rulers often have to lie, cheat,
and take all sorts of measures that are cruel and ruthless.
Machiavelli's theory reflected the practice of the time. Furious struggles for
power were the order of the day. The papacy itself became the object of pure
power politics. Kings and warlords from all European countries conquered and
lost cities and territories at a rate that would have been perceived as lawless
and chaotic in earlier times. Dramatists like Shakespeare explored the psychology
of Renaissance princes in such characters as Macbeth, Richard III, or Hamlet's
uncle Claudius. Hamlet expressed some of the dismay of the contemporaries of
such violent Renaissance men when he exclaimed: "The time is out of joint!
O cursed spite/ That ever I was born to set it right."
The second movement that put an end to the Middle Ages was the Reformation.
Its beginning is usually identified with Martin Luther's publication of his
95 theses against indulgences on a church door in Wittenberg in 1517. It unleashed
a storm of Protestant rebellions all over northern Europe, and eventually lead
to the break-up of Western Christianity into several independent churches. Europe
became divided into Catholic and Protestant regions. More than a hundred years
of fierce and brutal "Wars of Religion" ensued in which Catholic and
Protestant monarchs tried to gain as much territory as possible, and to install
their own faith as the official religion of their domains. The massacre of the
Huguenots in France and the Thirty Years War in Germany are among the low points
of these Wars of Religion.
The single most important doctrinal difference between Protestantism and Catholicism
was Luther's insistence that every individual had an immediate relation to God,
and that this relation could not be mediated through the offices of a priest
or a church hierarchy. By reading scriptures himself or herself, every Christian
had direct access to the truth; the authority of the Pope and his councils became
irrelevant for how the Word of God was to be interpreted by the believer. Luther
and other Protestant leaders initiated the translation of the Bible from the
traditional Latin into native languages, languages that ordinary people could
understand. Intensive study of scriptures, unsupervised by priests, became a
widespread practice. The Catholic church found this individualistic circumvention
of clerical authorities so threatening at the time, that it targeted Bible translators
for special persecution. Tyndal, the first translator of the New Testament into
English, was captured by the Inquisition while studying on the Continent, and
eventually executed by garroting.
Catholicism was a culture of community and hierarchy. The individual had its
predetermined place in both; individual freedom was limited by social status
and spiritual directives. Catholicism was thus a culture that provided certainty
and security to individuals who might otherwise feel abandoned and lost. Protestantism
furthered a culture of individualistic self-reliance. By setting the individual
free in his or her conscience, by defying the spiritual authority of the church
and its worldly extensions, Protestantism became one of the origins of modern
individualism in general.
Renaissance and Reformation as cultural movements did not come out of nowhere,
but unfolded in the context of the decaying social and economic order of the
Middle Ages. The most tangible development that marked the end of the medieval
period was the accelerating change from agrarian Feudalism to urban Capitalism.
Feudalism had been a relatively stable system for hundreds of years because
agricultural production was very primitive--producing few surpluses, and thus
keeping trade and urban developments at a low level. Serfs were forbidden by
law to leave the land on which they were born, and the few individuals who left
anyway had few places to go to. Most of the towns and cities of the former Roman
Empire had severely decayed or vanished altogether; in some places cattle grazed
among the sometimes still visible ruins of Antiquity. The once extensive road
system had fallen into complete disrepair. With the exception of a few thriving
cities like Paris or Cologne, an urban civilization no longer existed in the
Middle Ages.
Toward the end of this “Dark Age,” however, growing numbers of serfs
escaped to the few towns and cities that did exist, and these urban centers
began to grow and attract more migrants. New trades developed in these places,
and production intensified. Beginning with the Renaissance, small and primitive
shops were increasingly replaced by bigger and efficiently structured manufacturing
establishments. Ever larger amounts of money were invested in such enterprises;
banking houses were established to facilitate investment and trade.
The new interest in the sciences produced many technological innovations. Gutenberg's
invention of printing from movable type, for example, was the beginning of a
communication technology that profoundly changed the character of European culture,
and the systematic introduction of gunpowder lead to a whole new line of weapons
manufacturing--not to mention a whole new type of warfare. The cities as a whole
became very productive and grew rich through their trade and other commercial
activities. In time their accumulated money translated into political power.
The landed aristocracy began to lose influence and prestige; a new social class
began to make its weight felt: the wealthy burghers, the bourgeoisie. Capitalism
emerged as the dominant economic system of the future.
Capitalism is an economic system in which individual initiative and personal
wealth can play a significant role. Enormous personal fortunes were made around
1500 through money lending and investments. Bankers often could dictate terms
to eminent aristocrats and rulers. Besides Protestantism, Capitalism became
thus an important breeding ground for the kind of individualism that was to
characterize the culture of the West.
The fourth development that marks the end of the European Middle Ages was the
discovery and conquest of overseas territories. Columbus' accidental discovery
of the Americas in 1492 is often cited as the seminal event, but one gets a
more accurate picture of the situation if one remembers that within a short
period of time dozens of explorers and adventurers set out to seek their fortunes
across the oceans. New technologies, such as compasses, improved ways of rigging
sails, telescopes, and more reliable calculations in astronomy, made it possible
for European seafarers to cross much larger bodies of water than before. The
introduction of firearms and other weapons made it possible for small numbers
of Europeans to defeat and subjugate large numbers of natives who might not
welcome the foreign adventurers on their lands.
The ambitious and ruthless power seekers that Shakespeare portrayed so well
in his tragedies found their real-life counterparts in such adventurous conquerors
as Cortez, Alvarado, or Pizarro. Settlement of conquered overseas territories
followed quickly. Wherever possible, old native cultures were destroyed, Christianity
introduced by force or persuasion, available treasures plundered, plantations
organized, slaves imported, and the regular transfer of the new wealth to Europe
established on a regular basis. While Europeans became fully aware for the first
time of how small their old world had been in comparison to the whole globe,
they aggressively exported their own culture and thereby ensured that in time
their ways would become the ways of the world.
The result of all these social and cultural changes was a widespread feeling
of uncertainty among many Europeans. The old stable world of the Middle Ages
was gone, and a new permanent order had not yet been established. Old truths
had become increasingly doubtful, but new ones had not yet firmly taken hold
of people's minds. The new interest in scientific research produced the basis
of what was to become the sound knowledge of the future, but confidence in that
knowledge was as yet far from general. Philosophical skeptics like Michel de
Montaigne, whose influential Essays were published in 1580, emphasized
how uncertain all the old truths had turned out to be. His conclusion for the
present, however, was not that the emergence of the new sciences was a new dawn
of real knowledge. Instead he kept alive in people's minds the fundamental skeptical
question: How long will it take until the new truths will have to be discarded
as well?
In Montaigne's case the rebirth of the culture of Antiquity meant primarily
the rediscovery of certain skeptical philosophers of ancient Greece and Rome.
From the Pre-Socratic philosopher Heraclitus Montaigne took the notion that
everything is in constant flux. From such post-classical skeptic philosophers
as Pyrrho and Sextus Empiricus he accepted the notion that things that are in
flux cannot really be known, and that the human senses, constantly changing
themselves, could not possibly reveal to us the true nature of things. As so
many other scholars of the time, Montaigne lacked any kind of optimism with
regard to science and reason. For him a profound uncertainty was the basic human
condition.
Shakespeare's Prince Hamlet (the play of this name was first produced in 1601)
can be seen as a prototypical character of this transitional period of early
Modernity. Hamlet is a student in Wittenberg, the center of rebellious Lutheran
Protestantism. He has to return to Denmark to attend his father's funeral. To
his disgust he finds not only that his uncle has taken possession of the throne,
but also that his mother has married the usurper in undue haste. The ghost of
his father tells Hamlet that he was murdered by his uncle, and he urges the
prince to avenge his death. In the old days Hamlet would not have had much reason
to delay the revenge. Laertes, for example, the brother of his sweetheart Ophelia
(and a student at the very traditionalist University of Paris) has no compunction
to attack Hamlet when he is told that Hamlet killed his father Polonius. And
Fortinbras, the Prince of Norway, an impetuous and unthinking warrior of the
traditional kind, does not hesitate to wage a bloody war of conquest for a piece
of territory that is too small to bury all the dead that that war would produce--because
that is what princes are traditionally expected to do.
Both Laertes and Fortinbras are young men who feel no hesitation with regard
to their duties, as they identify with their traditional social role and the
conventional moral order of their world. But Hamlet is not a traditional prince;
he is a modern man, an individual full of doubt as to what is true, and what
would be the right way to act. For him the old role models are not beyond question
anymore, and what is real in the world, and what merely an illusion, cannot
be known with certainty. Hamlet finds himself to be the Prince of Denmark, to
be sure, but that is not so much a sound identity anymore, as a mere role. He
knows what people expect from him, and from his upbringing he knows what attitude
he ought to take, but in his own eyes that attitude is just a mask, a guise,
not something he could really be. Thus he lets time go by--partly loathing himself
for his vacillation between presumed duties and doubts, but without coming to
any satisfactory resolution. Action is finally forced upon him, but too late--and
too arbitrarily to do anyone any good. Hamlet dies senselessly--along with his
uncle, his mother, Ophelia, and Ophelia's brother. Politics as usual will continue
for a while after his death, but for him there is not much promise or meaning
in that. "The rest is silence," are his famous last words, and they
express that for him, the modern individual, the old world with its certainties
and meanings has forever gone.
The Doubt to End All Doubt
It was the passion and declared goal of Descartes to put an end to the pervasive
skepticism and uncertainty of the age. As he himself was troubled rather gravely
by all sorts of doubts, he could embark on the removal of the general skepticism
as a personal quest. He tackled the problem not by producing defenses for all
the doubtful opinions that were under attack, but, on the contrary, by intensifying
the general doubt to its ultimate extreme. Like a dentist who first cleans away
every trace of decay from a diseased tooth before filling in new material, Descartes
resolved to doubt absolutely everything that could possibly be doubted--in the
hope of thereby finding something that was beyond doubt. Whatever he would find
would be the basis for a new body of solid knowledge. His plan, in other words,
was to doubt his way to a new certainty.
Descartes received a first-rate education at the famous Jesuit school of La
Fleche in France, before leaving his native country to engage in extensive traveling
and gentlemen-soldiering in Holland and Germany. After some years he returned
to Paris for a short time, but thereafter moved to Holland to live the quiet
life of a scholar. Taking advantage of the possibilities of the emerging Capitalist
economy, he sold his inherited feudal rights and titles and invested the proceeds
in stocks; this allowed him to live comfortably on dividends and interest. Over
the years he made important scientific contributions to such fields as optometry,
mechanics, and analytic geometry. (The "Cartesian coordinates," for
example, are his invention.) He became most famous, however, for his philosophical
writings. In them he laid the groundwork for all the analyses and theories that
were to occupy European philosophers for the next two-hundred years and beyond.
In 1633 he was about to publish a scientific work called The World,
in which he defended, among other things, the heliocentric theory of Copernicus.
At the last minute he heard that Galileo was arrested by the Holy Inquisition
for defending the same theory. As Descartes throughout his life tried to avoid
such dangerous conflicts with the Catholic Church, he prevented the publication
of his book. In 1637 he published his Discourse on Method, in which
for the first time he presented his program of radical doubt. This program,
too, raised the suspicion of church officials. In response Descartes published,
in 1641, his Meditations on First Philosophy, in which he defended
his program of doubt by showing that such an undertaking would not necessarily
be in conflict with Catholic teachings. The Meditations, although a
slim volume, became an all-time classic. In a sense it is the beginning of modern
philosophy. And its center is the definition of the self as the one thing in
the world that cannot be doubted in any way.
The book starts out with Descartes’ description of his intention, namely
to rid his mind of all dubious and uncertain opinions—in order to have
a sound foundation for his future scientific research:
I have not just now learned that, from my earliest years, I have received
many false opinions as true, and that what I have since based on such unstable
principles could not but be very doubtful and uncertain. And ever since I have
realized that I would have to undertake seriously once in my life to be rid
of all the opinions I have previously received into my credence, and start all
over again from the foundations, if I wanted to establish something firm and
constant in the sciences. ... So today, quite opportunely for this plan, I have
freed my mind of all sorts of cares--fortunately feeling undisturbed by any
passions, and having found a secure repose in peaceful solitude. I shall apply
myself seriously and freely to the general destruction of all my old opinions.
As can be seen from these introductory remarks, Descartes establishes his program
of radical doubt as a decidedly solitary enterprise. He is conducting his philosophical
work in deliberate isolation--away from other people, and protected from the
disturbances that usually come with practical concerns and emotional involvement.
At the beginning of his Discourse On Method he had been similarly concerned
with shielding himself from inner and outer disturbances: "... I was caught
by the onset of winter.
There was no conversation to distract me, and being untroubled by any cares
or passions, I remained all day alone in a warm room. There I had plenty of
leisure to examine my ideas." Lack of company, lack of disquieting emotions,
and the absence of physical discomfort are the conditions that he considered
ideal for his philosophical undertaking--quite in contrast to the conditions
under which a thinker like Socrates would do his work. Socrates pursued his
philosophical investigations in dialogue with other people, surrounded by spectators
and listeners, in often heated exchanges, and sometimes with much to worry about
in terms of his well being and safety. Descartes’ deliberate retreat from
passionate and full-fledged involvement in life into deep solitude is more than
a personal whim. Even a detail like the quiet of winter is not an accidental
feature of the scene of his work: it fits the calm and unemotional way in which
this philosopher wished to do his thinking. The pronounced solitude of Descartes’
ivory tower corresponds, as will be seen, perfectly to the concept of self that
he was to develop.
Descartes starts his program of radical doubt in a relatively ordinary way,
in a way any critical scholar would go about doubting: He suspends his former
belief in the teachings of his academic teachers. This in itself, however, would
have been nothing new or particularly radical; a good deal of scholarly work
at all times consists in doing just that. The philosophically radical part of
his program went into effect when Descartes cast doubt on something that ordinarily
has to be taken for granted: the testimony of the senses. In his words: "All
that I have hitherto received as the most true and assured I have from the senses
or by the senses. Now, I have sometimes found that these senses are deceptive;
and it is wise never to rely entirely on those who have deceived us once."
This simple dismissal of the trustworthiness of the senses, however, is none
too convincing, as Descartes himself realizes. For the very detection of a false
testimony of the senses still requires the use of the senses: To see that a
distant object is not a tree, for example, but a water pump, one has to get
close to the object and take a look at it. It is my eyes that will tell me whether
my earlier impression was true or false.
To effectively cast doubt on the truth of all sense perception, Descartes has
to come up with a better argument. For this purpose he designs his famous dream
argument:
How often it has happened that I dreamed at night that I was by the fire,
though I was quite naked in my bed! ... I am reminded of having been deceived
by similar illusions while sleeping; and, lingering on this thought, I see so
clearly that there is no certain index at all by which wakefulness can be clearly
distinguished from sleep, that I am quite amazed and my amazement is such that
it is almost capable of persuading me that I am dreaming right now.
While dreaming, in other words, one is usually under the impression that what
one is dreaming is real. When I dream that I am sitting in front of the fire
place then I take it for granted that I am sitting in front of the fire place,
even though I am lying in bed. I usually will not discover my mistake until
I wake up. But if I can be so mistaken in dreams that I have had in the past,
how can I be sure that I am not dreaming right now? I obviously think that I
am sitting here, writing down these words; but how can I prove that I will not
wake up in a while and see that this, too, has been but a dream? How can I possibly
distinguish waking experiences from dreaming experiences?
The crux of Descartes' Dream Argument is the fact that there is no "index"
that indicates whether any given experience is real or a dream. My sitting here
and writing this can be a real event, but it can also be a dream. Dreams, after
all, can be very clear and vivid--so vivid that they make me sweat or be afraid
in the same way real events do. Without an "index" (perhaps something
like "C-SPAN" in the lower right corner of my visual field) I simply
cannot know for sure whether what I see or feel or hear is real or not. All
I can be sure of is that I have an experience--an experience involving the senses
of sight, touch, or whatever else may be involved. Consequently I do not know
whether these sense impressions are impressions of something that exists out
there in the world (a real writing desk, a real pen, etc.), or whether they
are figments of my imagination. The world that I perceive around me right now
may be real, but it may also be mere appearance, a deception. And even if it
seems extremely probable that what I see and touch right now is real, and not
a dream, I cannot be entirely certain about it. And absolute certainty is what
is at issue here.
Since Descartes' program of radical doubt requires that he doubt not only those
things that are obviously dubious, but everything that can be doubted at all,
Descartes has to suspend his belief in the reality of the external world--everything
which we perceive with our senses. This includes the reality of his own body.
Thus, for the time of his philosophical reflections he will assume that the
seemingly material world around him is not real, but something like a collection
of impressions that an "evil genie" has put in his mind:
I shall assume that the sky, the air, the earth, colors, shapes sounds and
all other external things are just illusions and dreams which he [the evil genie]
has used to lay traps for my credulity. I shall consider myself to have no hands,
no eyes, no flesh, no blood, as not having any senses, yet falsely believing
that I have all these things.
Although this assumption can be seen as just a device that Descartes uses in
his search for something absolutely certain, the feeling of the unreality of
the external world was a very powerful one at the time. Poets and playwrights
frequently invoked the images of the world as a mere stage, where people don
masks and play out roles, and life as nothing but a fleeting dream. Descartes
himself once wrote in a letter to a friend: "So far, I have been a spectator
in this theater which is the world, but I am now about to mount the stage, and
I come forward masked." The general insecurity with regard to the reality
of everything was so pervasive that Descartes' philosophical supposition of
the illusory nature of the external world was by no means crazily fantastic
or exotic for his readers.
Assuming then that the entire external world, including one's body, is a dreamlike
illusion, is there anything at all left that cannot be doubted? The fact that
"I am, I exist" is Descartes' answer. And this, in a nutshell, is
how he arrived at that conclusion: I can doubt the existence of the external
world, and I can doubt the existence of what appears to be my body. But when
I try to also doubt the existence of my inner self, my thinking, then I find
that I am still there--as a doubting mind. And if I try to doubt the existence
of this doubting mind, then I still find the activity of my doubting. And no
matter how hard I try to doubt this doubting, I cannot help but find the process
of doubting. My doubting is the thing that in the end I cannot doubt. Doubting,
however, is thinking, and the existence of thinking implies the existence of
a thinker. Hence Descartes' famous conclusion: "I think, therefore I am"("Cogito,
ergo sum" in the Latin in which he wrote).
After establishing that he exists, Descartes lays out the answer to
the question as to what he is:
I find here that thought is an attribute that belongs to me; it alone cannot
be separated from me. I am, I exist--that is certain; but for how long? As long
as I think. For it may happen that, if I stopped thinking altogether, I would
at the same time altogether cease being. I am now admitting nothing that would
not be necessarily true. Thus I am, speaking precisely, only a thinking thing;
that is to say, a mind, an understanding, or a reason, which are terms whose
meaning was previously unknown to me. In other words: I am a real thing and
really existent; but what thing? I have already said it: a thing that thinks.
The Radical Separation of the Mind from the World
By defining his essential self as mind, and as mind only, Descartes made a radical
and fateful separation of the mind from the body (and from the physical world
in general) a cornerstone of his entire philosophy. The mind, according to him,
is complete in itself, it has no need for anything physical to be what it is.
It knows itself directly and with absolute certainty, while knowledge of the
external world is at least theoretically doubtful. The self as mind exists as
a distinct substance, as “thinking matter,” and it enjoys a supreme
independence from the world of “extended matter” that is subject
to the laws of physics.
There are two cultural legacies of lasting importance that Descartes’
radical separation of the mind from the physical world has left—two philosophical
conceptions of reality that found expression in how Europeans related to their
environment, and how they perceived their over-all existence in the world. Interestingly,
these two conceptions are ultimately not compatible with each other; they point,
in fact, to an important contradiction in Descartes’ philosophical system.
Nevertheless, they both grow out of the basic analyses of Descartes’ Meditations,
and they both left their mark on the general culture of the West.
The one legacy fastens on the absolute sovereignty of the mind vis-à-vis
everything that is not mind. While the external world, including the thinker's
body, is subject to the laws of physics and other external contingencies, the
mind is not. I, being pure mind, enjoy a supreme degree of independence from
my body and everything physical. I may inhabit a body, and thus be a citizen
of two worlds, as it were, the physical world and the world of the mind. But
the body is external and secondary for my essential existence. I am located
in it like a pilot in a complex machine. As its pilot I am not identical with
the machine, but I have a good deal of control over it. From there my control
extends over parts of the rest of the external world as well. The physical world
and the body, according to this Cartesian conception, are mere matter--mere
raw material at the disposal of the mind. They are the other of the mind--alien
substances without inherent value. The mind can do with them as it pleases.
The radical separation of mind and body--and of the mental and the physical
in general--is known as "Cartesian Dualism." And by attributing to
the mind something like sovereignty over the external physical world, it has
prepared the way for a distinctly modern conception and experience of reality,
a conception which replaced older ways of seeing the world in drastic ways.
In her seminal work The Death of Nature Carolyn Merchant has documented
several ways in which people switched from thinking about the world and the
things in it in terms of living beings to thinking about them in terms of inanimate
objects that behave and can be manipulated according to the laws of mechanics.
Until the emergence of the mechanistic world view, many people instinctively
conceived of the earth as a mother, for example, or at least as a living and
personal being. Mining in the Middle Ages, for example, was still done with
a feeling that ores were dug from the bowels of a living creature, and that
such violations had to be atoned for with special prayers and rituals.
The modern mechanistic view of the world did away with such feelings. People
did not only find it easier to approach such things as trees and rocks as mere
objects, but they extended such insensitivity to animals and human beings as
well. Animals have no souls, according to Descartes, and so it gradually became
all right to use them as so much dead matter, or to subject them routinely to
painful scientific experiments. And thinking of human beings as mechanisms made
it not only easier for absolute monarchs and their generals to think of their
soldiers as mere fighting machines (it was at this time that mechanical drill
and geometric marching formations were introduced into armies), but also facilitated
the massive introduction of slaves into overseas territories as mere tools of
production. A self that is as separated from the external world as that of Descartes
can approach living beings and deal with them much more ruthlessly than someone
who approaches them on the basis of the sympathy that one would have toward
fellow-creatures.
Cartesian Dualism also prepared the way for modern scientists to think about
the world in abstractions. The worldview of Newtonian physics, for example,
was greatly facilitated by Descartes' philosophical system. Before Descartes
and Newton such plainly observable phenomena as the falling of an apple from
a tree, the rhythm of the tides in the oceans, or the movements of the planets
around the sun were separate and distinct events. Through Newton's abstract
conceptualization, however, apples, oceans, and heavenly bodies all became essentially
the same: masses attracted by masses that move according to the same laws of
gravitation. The colorful variety of sensuous objects disappeared, as it were,
from the view of the learned. What all matter has in common, and the mathematically
expressed laws that govern its motions, became the dominant focus of modern
observers of nature. The shift away from variety and sensuous detail to abstract
entities and structures did much to increase human control over the natural
world, but it also alienated the observer from the things observed. It replaced
the closeness of touching, smelling, or seeing with the distance of mathematical
calculation. And it facilitated the conquest of reality by the mind in the way
it was intuited by Descartes’ radical separation of the mind from the
world.

Cartesian Dualism found many other expressions in the culture of his age as
well. The French garden architecture of the 17th and 18th centuries is a striking
demonstration of the spirit of Cartesian thinking. This type of landscaping,
which was widely copied throughout Europe, is characterized by the demonstrative
superimposition of geometric shapes and figures on nature. The natural terrain
of a garden is not allowed to remain as it is found, but is carefully leveled,
and then sectioned into regular parts until it resembles a mathematician's blueprint.
Plants are placed in such a way that they form straight lines, circles, ellipses,
or artfully designed mazes. Individual trees and bushes are clipped until they
represent perfect spheres, cones, squares, or other geometrical figures. It
was the most deep-seated passion of the age to press nature into designs that
are not natural. Pure geometry is a human creation, a creation of the abstract
mind. To superimpose geometry on what otherwise grows in irregular forms was
the lustful demonstration of the detached sovereign mind's power over the external
world.
The Cartesian separation of the mind from all physical matter facilitated not
only a willful attitude of the human mind toward nature, but also toward the
monuments and creations of history. That is made explicit in the way Descartes
looks at older European towns, towns that are irregular in their layouts because
of the slow and gradual accumulation of houses and streets in the course of
centuries. As befits the inventor of the Cartesian Coordinates, Descartes preferred
a regular geometrical grid to the crooked designs of medieval communities. In
his Discourse on Method he writes:
Thus it is observable that the buildings which a single architect has planned
and executed, are generally more elegant and commodious than those which several
have attempted to improve, by making old walls serve for purposes for which
they have not originally been built. Thus also, those ancient cities which,
from being at first only villages, have become, in the course of time, large
towns, are usually but ill laid out compared with the regularly constructed
towns which a professional architect has freely planned on an open plain; so
that although the several buildings of the former may often equal or surpass
in beauty those of the latter, yet when one observes their indiscriminate juxtaposition,
there a large one and here a small, and the consequent crookedness and irregularity
of the streets, one is disposed to allege that chance rather than any human
will guided by reason must have led to such an arrangement.
It is obvious from the representative architecture of the next hundred fifty
years or so (from the castle and park of Versailles in particular), that builders
that came out of the age of Descartes preferred to do away with all remnants
of the past, and to start building everything from scratch. Beauty and comfort
were primarily seen in the creations of the human mind, in the "human will
guided by reason," while nature and the remnants of history were at best
available raw material, and at worst an annoyance or a menace. The symmetries
and regularities of geometric architecture were the bastions of order and stability,
erected against the threats of uncertainty and anarchy, just as the philosophical
reconstruction of reality on the basis of Descartes’ “I think, therefore
I am” was the philosopher’s bulwark against the unsettling skepticism
and uncertainties which he had set out to conquer. Separating the self as pure
mind from the contingencies of uncontrolled nature, and installing it as the
sovereign ruler over everything external, was the basic vision that shaped people’s
existence in the age of Descartes.
Lording over nature has its price, however: It implies the alienation of the
ruler from the ruled. The Cartesian who overpowers nature has to mortify part
of himself or herself—feelings, passions, the body, and everything else
that is part of the physical world. There is a certain coldness in geometrical
forms and the life of the Cartesian mind, and therefore a subliminal longing
for the nature that has become lost. However much satisfaction people gain by
subjugating nature, there is something in them that does not want to dominate,
but rather to become one with her. This underlying ambivalence toward nature,
as will be seen, plays an important role in “Last Year at Marienbad.”
It provides the inner parameters within which the story of the film unfolds.
The other important legacy that originates with Descartes’ radical separation
of the mind from everything physical is the inherently solipsistic individualism
that time and again emerged in the course of modern European philosophy. Solipsism
is the extremist philosophical theory that I am the only being that exists.
This theory is invariably perceived as either comical or crazy by anyone who
discusses it, and most philosophers have assumed that there are convincing reasons
for dismissing it without much ado. The way Descartes sets up and explains his
procedure of radical doubt, however, makes it impossible to avoid the conclusion
that the doubting self may indeed be the only being that exists. In spite of
all efforts to refute it, Cartesianism remains haunted by the ghost of Solipsism.
For if it is possible to doubt the existence of the external world, it is equally
possible to doubt the existence of other human beings. If rivers and mountains
or the desk at which I write may be figments of my imagination, then obviously
the people that I perceive in this world may be imaginary as well. What my senses
provide me with may be representations of beings that exist outside of me, but
they may just as well be impressions that reside in my mind alone. The decisive
point of Cartesian doubt is the contention that I cannot go outside of myself,
as it were, to check whether what I see is real or not. I am always and irremediably
inside my mind, and that always keeps alive the theoretical possibility of the
truth of Solipsism.
In his Meditations Descartes had laid out his program of radical doubt, followed
it through, and then found that there was something that he could not possibly
doubt: his own doubting, and thus the existence of his own thinking self. From
there he had proceeded to argue that the existence of the external world can
be proven as well. But while Descartes may have convinced himself of the reality
of what the senses convey, he did not convince many other philosophers that
his reasoning to that effect was sound. His argument in support of the reality
of the external world does not amount to more, indeed, than his assertion that
God is good, and that therefore God would not permit anyone to be deceived to
the extent that the "evil genie" might deceive people. Descartes has
therefore gone down in history as a philosopher whose doubts were far more convincing
and intriguing than his arguments that were to lay these doubts to rest. To
this day Descartes’ Dream Argument from the beginning of the Meditations
is seen as far more powerful and interesting than his attempted restitution
of common sense. Once he had introduced his radical doubt, in other words, Descartes
never quite found his way back to a robust perception of the outer world as
real. Within the orbit of Cartesian thinking the unreality of what I perceive
outside me is still a theoretical possibility, and thus the possible truth of
Solipsism a haunting thought.
As mentioned earlier, Descartes was a philosopher who preferred to think in
solitude. And by making his “I think, therefore I am” the inner
center of his worldview, he created a model of self-reflection that influenced
the entirety of modern European philosophy profoundly. Much of what later thinkers
belabored revolves around the radical separation of the self from everything
external, and the sometimes desperate attempts to reconnect the self with the
rest of the world and other human beings. The dialectic of the self’s
radical separation from the external world and its inevitable re-connection
to it characterizes much of modern European thought. It is a dialectic that
is also at the heart of “Last Year at Marienbad.” It is one possible
summary of the film to say that it is the Cartesian mind’s attempt to
find an exit from the labyrinth of its solipsistic solitude.
(From Jorn K. Bramann: The Educating Rita Workbook,
Copyright © 2004.)
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