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  February 21st: Rene Descartes' 
      Discourse on Method
  
   
   Leading Class Discussion 
  We have our second "Leading Class Discussion" participant. If you haven't signed up for a day and reading, please see me ASAP! 
  I found my green spiral notebook for the class. The cats hid it. 
  Descartes' Discourse on Method 
  Well, Descartes is certainly sure of himself...or is he? Besides being well known in Western Civilization for cogito ergo sum ("I think, therefore, I am"), Descartes is important for math (Cartesian coordinate system) and  scientific method. More importantly for us, though, is that he's the last one who thinks linearly... 
  I think Descartes is a proto-solipsist (here's a link to a contemporary discussion). Although he's certainly no nihilist,  he thinks that one can know best when one doesn't have the "noise" of other thinkers (thought is much simpler when you don't have to deal with the opinions of others...). However,  even though he believes he has THE idea of reality that applies to all people, he is concerned with his own way of knowing. Unlike the 19th- and 20th-century existentialists, he thinks that way of knowing is universal and others will get to his conclusion...eventually. 
  What can Descartes teach us about rhetoric? I think we have to think about epistemology first and then try to answer how Descartes might answer these questions: 
  
    - From where does knowledge come?
 
    - How can we best discover knowledge?
 
    - Who are knowledge authorites?
 
    - What is the role of education (the Schools) in creating and disseminating knowledge?
 
    - How can one know the world around him or her?
 
   
  Specifics from the Book 
  I know we're going to have a difficult time pointing to exact passages in the various translations/editions you'll have, so let's try to remember to read the exact quotation when commenting on it. 
  Descartes attempted to replace the Ancient philosophers' teaching (namely, Aristotle's) with his much simpler one. Here are some highlights: 
  
    - Descartes on the history of philosophy:
 
      I   shall say nothing about philosophy, except that, seeing that it has been   cultivated by the very best minds which have ever existed over  several centuries  and that, nevertheless, not one of its problems is not subject to disagreement, and consequently is uncertain, I was not   presumptuous enough to hope to succeed in it any  better than others; and seeing how many   different opinions are sustained by learned men about   one item,  without its being possible for more than  one ever to be true, I   took to be tantamount to false everything which was merely probable. 
      (Trans. Sutcliffe,  p. 32) 
    - The benefit of one thinker:
 
      Among these, one of the first was that I noticed myself thinking about how often   there is not so much perfection in works created from several pieces and made by   the hands of various masters as there is in those which one person has worked on   alone.    ("Discourse 2," para. 1) 
      ...it is almost impossible that our judgments are as pure and solid as they would   have been if we had had the total use of our reason from the moment of our birth   and had never been led by anything but our reason.  ("Discourse 2," [bottom of] para. 1) 
      ...a plurality of voices is not a proof worth anything for truths which are a   little difficult to discover, because it is far more probable that one man by   himself would have found them than an entire people.
      ("Discourse 2," [bottom of] para. 4) 
    - Three or Four Maxims for a "provisional moral code"
      (Trans. Sutcliffe,  p. 45)
 
      1. Obey laws and customs of my country; obey the church (p. 45) 
      2. Be firm and resolute in my actions; don't follow doubtful opinions (p. 46) 
      3. Conquer myself--not fortune; change my desires--don't order the world (p. 47) 
      4. Choose the best occupation--devote my life to cultivating my reason (p. 48) 
    - Reject all doubt:
 
      I wanted only to carry out research into the truth, I thought I must do the   opposite and reject as absolutely false everything about which I could imagine   the least doubt, in order to see if there would be anything totally indisputable   remaining after that in my belief. ("Discourse 4,"  para. 1) 
    - Knowledge of perfection:
 
      I concluded that the idea had been put in me by a nature which was truly more   perfect than I was, even one which contained in itself all the perfections about   which I could have some idea, that is to say, to explain myself in a single   phrase, a nature which was God....it must of necessity be the case that there was some other more perfect being,   on whom I depended and from whom I had acquired all that I had. ("Discourse 4,"  para. 4) 
     
    - Laws of Nature Universal:
 
      I made known the laws of nature, and without basing my reasoning on any   principle other than the infinite perfections of God, I tried to demonstrate all   of these laws about which one could entertain any doubts, to show that they are   such that, although God could have created several worlds, there would not be   one where these failed to be observed. ("Discourse 5," [middle of]  para. 2) 
    - True reasons vs. Verisimilitudes (probabilities)
 
      so that those who do not understand the force of mathematical proofs and who are   not accustomed to distinguishing true reasons from probable reasons do not   venture to deny this matter without examining it, I wish to advise them that   this movement which I have just explained is as necessarily a result of the mere   arrangement of the organs which one can see in the heart with one's own eyes and   of the heat which one can feel there with one's fingers and of the nature of   blood which one can recognize from experience, as the movement of a clock is   necessarily a result of the force, the placement, and the shape of its   counter-weights and wheels. ("Discourse 5," [bottom of]  para. 6) 
    - Even morons can form sentences:
 
      For it is really remarkable that there are no men so dull and stupid, including   even idiots, who are not capable of putting together different words and of   creating out of them a conversation through which they make their thoughts   known; by contrast, there is no other animal, no matter how perfect and how   successful it might be, which can do anything like that.  ("Discourse 5," next to last  para.) 
    - Technological discovery
 
      my notions had made me see that it is possible to reach understandings which are   extremely useful for life, and that instead of the speculative philosophy which   is taught in the schools, we can find a practical philosophy by which, through   understanding the force and actions of fire, water, air, stars, heavens, and all   the other bodies which surround us as distinctly as we understand the various   crafts of our artisans, we could use them in the same way for all applications   for which they are appropriate and thus make ourselves, as it were, the masters   and possessors of nature.  ("Discourse 6,"  para. 2) 
    - Science (medicine) will continue to advance and cure our ills:
 
      But without having any design to denigrate it, I am confident that there is no   one, not even those who make a living from medicine, who would not claim that   everything we know in medicine is almost nothing in comparison to what remains   to be known about it and that we could liberate ourselves from an infinity of   illnesses, both of the body and the mind, and also perhaps even of the   infirmities of ageing, if we had sufficient knowledge of their causes and of all   the remedies which nature has provided for us.  ("Discourse 6,"  para. 2) 
    - Knowledge begets knowledge:
 
      it is almost the same with those who discover truth little by little in the   sciences as it is with those who, once they start to become rich, have less   trouble in making large acquisitions than they did previously, when they were   poorer, in making much smaller ones. ("Discourse 6,"  para. 6)
      
        - Is it just me or is this a contradiction? Maybe I'm just thinking about technology as a group problem to be solved...
 
       
     
    - We need to talk about Descartes the Science Fiction writer--he's talking about robots!
 
   
  Descartes believes he can advance a philosophy that explains all...what's the assumption in that? 
  Here's a link to papil infallibility and ex cathedra. 
  Richards, Rhetoric 
  I don't think we should ignore Richards discussion of Rheotric as a male-dominated activity. Let's jump on over to pages 70-72. 
  Richards reminded me of the rhetoric of the Anti-Woman's Suffrage Movement. Take a look at this page with a few of the arguments. Sound familiar? 
  Remind me to tell you a story about two students from last year's Intro to Technical Comm class...connotations of "feminism." 
  Victor Hugo's Les Miserables 
  I was reading this book over break, and I thought about all I know about France, French History, European history, etc., and I realized that philosophy and philosophers always played a major role in the narratives I've abosrbed. The French Revolution was a HUGE deal. That seems obvious, but Hugo's book seems to capture the difference in society after the Revolution. It's fallacious to think that all history leads ideally to the present as if it were staged, but we (historians included) can't help but think about history as progressing. 
  Anyway, Descartes is a major influence on French/European thinking (again, probably obvious). Although Hugo isn't responding to Descartes, he's capturing an essence of French intellectual thought in the context of post-Waterloo Europe. 
  While reading Les Miseables, I was thinking about this class and how it could be worked into the reading. I wasn't going to assign the 1463-page book! But I wanted to see if we could discuss the thinking and ideology that made this book possible. After all, novels (as are people, technologies, ideas, etc.) are products of the society from which they come. 
  Selections from Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 
      Vol.2: 
                Cosette, Book 1: Waterloo, Ch. 27 
                Vol.2: Cosette, 
                Book 1: Waterloo, Ch. 28 
  The above chapters claim the revolution was progress, progress towards liberty. Even though Napoleon was defeated, the other monarchs of Europe "saw the writing on the wall" and were willing to limit their monarchal powers. 
  Vol 
    5: Jean Valjean, Book 1: War B/tw 4 Walls, Ch. 5 
    Vol 
      5: Jean Valjean, Book 1: War B/tw 4 Walls, Ch. 20 
The above chapters (pp. 1188-1192 and pp. 1234-1242) also mention Progress! as the purpose of revolution or, in this case, the doomed insurgency. In Ch. 5, Enjolras speaks to the insurgents, but he's really speaking to all French citizens, the people. He espouses Libery, Fraternity, Equality, and education will bring that to the people.  
What's interesting for this class? From where do these ideas come? Why would he harken back to make that point? The time period is the culmination of historical progress to democracy... 
  What can we say about these oratorical "masterpieces"? 
  Anatomy of Oratory and Arguments 
  I created a web page to help us think about arguments and oratory. Let's focus on Nikki Giovanni's "We Are Virginia Tech" and a discussion about the "Misery Index." 
Rhetorical Analysis 
  The above  oratory and argument should give you ideas about how to approach your Mini-Rhetorical Analysis assignment due next week (2/28). 
  Next Week's Reading 
   We're going to jump a couple hundred years ahead and discuss Roland Barthes's  Mythologies next week (2/28). It might have been better (chronologically) to read Nietzsche before Barthes, but I had a reason for doing it this way. I'm giving you March 8th off, so I'm thinking you can catch up on Barthes if you don't finish Mythologies next week and finish the shorter Elements of Semiology for March 14th. Because you have a paper due next week, I'll be flexible. I think this is a good idea. 
  Don't forget your presents for me next week. 
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