Discourse on the Method: A Foundational Text of Modern Philosophy - Hardcover

Descartes, Rene

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9781515433125: Discourse on the Method: A Foundational Text of Modern Philosophy

Synopsis

René Descartes' Discourse is one of the defining works of modern philosophy, a compact and searching account of reason, doubt, knowledge, and intellectual method. Written as an accessible statement of philosophical inquiry rather than as a closed academic system, the book sets out Descartes' attempt to establish a reliable foundation for truth by questioning inherited assumptions and testing knowledge through disciplined reason.

Best known for the argument often rendered as "I think, therefore I am," Discourse on the Method helped reshape Western thought by placing methodical doubt, clear reasoning, and the thinking self at the centre of philosophy. Its influence reaches across epistemology, metaphysics, rationalism, science, mathematics, and the long development of Enlightenment thought. For readers of classic philosophy, intellectual history, and foundational works of reason, Descartes' essay remains an essential starting point.

First published in 1637, this work stands at the threshold of modern philosophy, bridging late Renaissance learning and the rationalist tradition that would shape later European thought. It is brief enough for new readers yet substantial enough for continued study, making it especially useful for students, libraries, general readers, and anyone building a serious philosophy collection.

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About the Author

René Descartes (1596-1650) was a French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist whose work helped establish the foundations of modern Western philosophy. Often associated with rationalism, methodical doubt, and the search for certainty, Descartes transformed philosophical inquiry by insisting that knowledge must be tested through reason rather than accepted merely through tradition or sensory experience. His famous formulation "I think, therefore I am" became one of the central statements in the history of philosophy and remains a defining point of entry into questions of selfhood, consciousness, knowledge, and reality.Descartes' influence extends well beyond philosophy. His mathematical work contributed to analytic geometry, and his broader intellectual project helped shape early modern science, metaphysics, epistemology, and debates over mind and body. Alongside Meditations on First Philosophy and Principles of Philosophy, Discourse on the Method remains one of his most widely read works, valued by students, scholars, and general readers as a clear and powerful introduction to the rationalist tradition and the emergence of modern thought.

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