Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron

Descartes is generally not very inclined to admit what he owes to his predecessors. His relationship to the greek Skeptics is all the more difficult to identify, that it has been paradoxically hidden by the skeptical reception of his work : in spite of the indisputable...

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Main Author: Sylvia Giocanti
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: École Normale Supérieure de Lyon 2013-07-01
Series:Astérion
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/asterion/2371
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spelling doaj-22702e48d60c45f18c553a8d4d783a062020-11-25T02:15:00ZfraÉcole Normale Supérieure de LyonAstérion1762-61102013-07-011110.4000/asterion.2371Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de CicéronSylvia GiocantiDescartes is generally not very inclined to admit what he owes to his predecessors. His relationship to the greek Skeptics is all the more difficult to identify, that it has been paradoxically hidden by the skeptical reception of his work : in spite of the indisputable contribution of the Academics to the writing of the argument of the Meditations, the cartesian venture has been interpreted as inaugurating a new and radical Skepticism doomed to mark a break with the tradition. However, Descartes uses Academics’ Skepticism, and particularly the sorit argument, in order to criticize the whole philosophical tradition, and to grant his mind such a licence, that neither knowledge, nor even one belief could be a priori preserved. Nevertheless, uncertainty is not entirely dismissed from his philosophy which inherits, in science as in morals, the skeptical insight of probability, as this latter notion has been passed down from Cicero’s Academica.http://journals.openedition.org/asterion/2371DescartesThe AcademicsskepticismCiceroprobabilitélikelihood
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sylvia Giocanti
spellingShingle Sylvia Giocanti
Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron
Astérion
Descartes
The Academics
skepticism
Cicero
probabilité
likelihood
author_facet Sylvia Giocanti
author_sort Sylvia Giocanti
title Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron
title_short Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron
title_full Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron
title_fullStr Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron
title_full_unstemmed Comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». Descartes héritier des Académiques de Cicéron
title_sort comment traiter de ce qui n’est pas « entièrement certain et indubitable ». descartes héritier des académiques de cicéron
publisher École Normale Supérieure de Lyon
series Astérion
issn 1762-6110
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Descartes is generally not very inclined to admit what he owes to his predecessors. His relationship to the greek Skeptics is all the more difficult to identify, that it has been paradoxically hidden by the skeptical reception of his work : in spite of the indisputable contribution of the Academics to the writing of the argument of the Meditations, the cartesian venture has been interpreted as inaugurating a new and radical Skepticism doomed to mark a break with the tradition. However, Descartes uses Academics’ Skepticism, and particularly the sorit argument, in order to criticize the whole philosophical tradition, and to grant his mind such a licence, that neither knowledge, nor even one belief could be a priori preserved. Nevertheless, uncertainty is not entirely dismissed from his philosophy which inherits, in science as in morals, the skeptical insight of probability, as this latter notion has been passed down from Cicero’s Academica.
topic Descartes
The Academics
skepticism
Cicero
probabilité
likelihood
url http://journals.openedition.org/asterion/2371
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