Exposition

Cartesian Doubt (last edited: 2026)

Tolga Theo Yalur

About this exposition

This article "Cartesian Doubt" critiques René Descartes' foundational method of systematic doubt by drawing on the analysis of French philosopher Michel Serres, who likens the Cartesian enterprise to the predatory logic found in La Fontaine’s fable "The Wolf and the Lamb". Serres argues that Cartesian doubt is not a neutral search for truth but rather an "absolute irreversibility doctrine" that functions as a one-way mechanism to destroy all prior beliefs and sensory data to reach the predetermined outcome of the cogito. This process creates a permanent structural gap between the subject and the world, establishing a "foundational violence" in Western thought. Furthermore, the article challenges Descartes' metaphor of sorting a finite basket of apples, asserting that it fails to account for the infinite and dynamic nature of error and decay in a complex, modern scientific reality.
typeresearch exposition
date11/01/2026
last modified11/01/2026
statusin progress
share statuspublic
copyrightTolga Theo Yalur
licenseCC BY-NC-ND
languageEnglish
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/4110768/4110767


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