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MODIFIED/MODIFIED
JAN 21 2002
Programme
for Receptions of Descartes
March
14-17, 2002
THURSDAY,
MARCH 14
Condemnation and Critique
Chair: M. Rozemond
2-3:05
J.-R. Armogathe (Paris) The First Condemnation of Descartes's
uvres
3:20-4:25 T. Lennon (Western Ontario) Huet and Regis
on the Reality of Cartesian Doubt
Most
of the topics that have drawn the attention of Descartes's
readers over the past half-century did not attract nearly
the same attention in seventeenth-century works. An exception
is Pierre-Daniel Huet's Censura philosophiae cartesianae (1689),
where latter-day chestnuts such as the cogito, the circularity
of the Meditations, the nature of clarity and distinctness,
the mind-body problem, and so on, are treated in unprecedented
detail. Moreover, Descartes's views on these topics are treated
with unsurpassed passion, almost all of it unreservedly negative.
The paper will say a bit about Huet, this work of his, and
why it has been neglected. Mainly, however, the paper will
explore Huet's criticisms of Descartes's use of doubt and
the debate that ensued on this topic between Regis, who produced
a Réponse on behalf of Cartesianism (1691), and Huet,
who replied in a greatly expanded edition of the Censura (1694)
and in still unpublished manuscript material. The issue of
doubt begins the Censura, for Huet took it to be the foundation
of Descartes's philosophy, and it reveals a great deal about
the motivation, tone, style and nature of Huet's critique
as a whole.
4:40-5:45 T. Schmaltz (Duke) Cartesianism in Context:
The Paris Formulary
and Regis's Usage
I offer
an account of the French reception of Descartes that highlights
a formulary that was imposed on the Paris philosophy faculty
in 1691. The Paris Formulary insinuated that Cartesianism
not only requires that reason has priority over faith, but
also leads to heretical Jansenist views concerning free will.
In his 1704 Usage de la raison, the French Cartesian Pierre-Sylvain
Regis in effect countered these charges by insisting on the
absolute distinction between faith and reason and by articulating
a non-Jansenist account of free will. I argue that though
the responses are problematic in certain respects, the problems
are instructive since they reveal the inadequacy of the suggestion
in the Paris Formulary of an essential connection between
Cartesian philosophy and Jansenist theology.
6 Pig Pickin' (Franklin Center)
FRIDAY,
MARCH 15
Spinozistic Connections
Chair: R. Watson
9-10:05
D. Garber (Chicago) Clauberg on Continuous Re-Creation
10:20-11:25 S. Nadler (Wisconsin-Mad.) Descartes's Soul,
Spinoza's Mind
I examine
the differences between Descartes's conception of the human
soul and Spinoza's view of the mind. I will focus especially
on the issue of the immortality of the soul for which Descartes
argues and the eternity of the mind that appears in Spinoza's
Ethics.
12-2 Lunch Buffet (Franklin Center)
Influence on Natural Philosophy
Chair: A. Lolordo
2-3:05
P. Lodge (Tulane) The Cartesian Account of the Material
World:
Huet's Censura and De Volder's Reply
Burcher
de Volder is perhaps best known to historians of philosophy
through his correspondence with Leibniz between 1698 and 1706.
However, he came to Leibniz's attention primarily as the author
of "Exercitationes Academicae quibus Ren Cartesii Philosophiae
defenditur adversus Petri Danielis Huettii Episcopi Sucessionis
Censuram Philosophiae Cartesianae," a Cartesian response
to the critique of Descartes in Huet's Censura.
The paper includes (1) A critical discussion of little studied
parts of Huet's Censura which deal with the Cartesian philosophy
of nature and (2) an account of the Cartesianism that emerges
in De Volder's response to Huet.
Aside from providing a fascinating window on Cartesianism
in the last decade of the 17th Century, the parts of the Exercitationes
that I discuss provide further evidence relating to the Klever's
claim that De Volder was a "Crypto-Spinozist". In
addition, they present important background information for
those who are interested in De Volder's correspondence with
Leibniz, which is also concerned primarily with the nature
of the material world.
3:20-4:25 D. Jesseph (North Carolina State) Descartes and
British Philosophy
A consideration
of Joseph Glanvill's Scepsis Scientifica and its connections
to Henry More and the early Royal Society. The thesis here
is that the unresolved tensions in the Cartesian account of
body, mind, causation, and explanation led on the one hand
to Glanvill's mitigated skepticism in the service of empirical
science, and the other to More's theory of plastic natures
and the essential activity of body. These are brought together
in the treatment of the mechanical philosophy in the Royal
Society, where Cartesian themes involving mind, mechanism,
and theology get modified and reinterpreted in a variety of
ways.
4:40-5:45 M. Atherton (Wisconsin-Milw.) Cartesianism in
England: The Case of Vision
Sorting
out Descartes's impact on English language philosophy has
been hampered by the way in which early modern thinkers have
been traditionally labelled Continental Rationalists and British
Empiricists. While these labels have deservedly been criticised,
there is a hint of truth contained in the fact that English
language philosophy in the century after Descartes's death
came to be dominated by many of the projects and concerns
initiated by John Locke. So it seems as though one will look
in vain for Cartesianism among the English, or, at the very
least, be reduced to pulling "rationalist" elements
out from canonically empiricist ideas. It is my thought, however,
that we will go much further in tracing Descartes's influence
if we abandon these labels altogether. I find that the theory
of vision provides an excellent example for this approach.
Descartes's work on vision gave the theory of vision new direction.
Descartes formulated the problems of vision psycho-physically,
claiming that "it is the mind, not the eye, that sees."
In so doing, Descartes provided the reference framework for
much subsequent work on vision. In English speaking
countries in the century after Descartes's death, there was
considerable work on vision, most notably that of George Berkeley,
which can be understood as working out problems within Descartes's
original approach. In my paper for this conference, I plan
to work out and
discuss the nature of these Cartesian connections in the theory
of vision.
7:30 Dinner at Café Momo
SATURDAY,
MARCH 16
French Variations
Chair: A. Simmons
9-10:05
P. Easton (Claremont) Cartesianism and the Spirit of Reform
(1650-
1678): Desgabets's Indefectibility Thesis-A Step too Far?
The focus
of my examination will be Desgabets's indefectibility thesis
and its reception by early defenders of the Cartesian philosophy
who reacted to this doctrine. Such opponents and proponents
include Corbinelli, Retz, and Regis. One commentator has remarked
that this thesis fills an important lacuna in the history
of philosophy since it serves the transition between
the Method and the Theologico-Politicus of Spinoza and helps
to explain Leibniz's comment that Spinozism is nothing but
an immoderate Cartesianism. My view is that Desgabets does
not take the Cartesian doctrine of matter a step too far but
rather quite reasonably sees it as a logical in step of the
Cartesian metaphysics.
10:20-11:25 R. Ariew (Virginia Tech) Oratorians and Cartesianism
in France: 1670-1683
A number
of Oratorians taught Cartesian philosophy during the second
half of the seventeenth century, despite warnings and reprimands
by their superiors, official edicts by the order, and actual
punishment by the university and the state. However, some
Oratorians-Jean Baptiste de la Grange in Les principes de
la philosophie contre les nouveaux philosophes, for example-were
opponents of Cartesian philosophy. I examine this debate within
the Oratory, from de la Grange's treatise to the censured
writings of the Cartesian Oratorians at Angers (Fromentier,
Lamy, Villecrose, and Pélaut). I also look at Entretiens
sur les sciences, the subsequent published work of Bernard
Lamy. The object of this examination is to see how Cartesian
philosophy changes when it becomes Oratorian philosophy and
whether this received Cartesian philosophy can answer its
Oratorian critics.
12-2 Boxed Lunch in Duke Gardens (weather permitting)
Cartesianism Beyond France
Chair: Dennis Des Chene
2-3:05
T. Verbeek (Utrecht) Wittich and Descartes on the Concept
of God
3:20-4:25 G. Belgioioso (Lecce) Les Images de Descartes
en Italie
4:40-5:45 S. Hutton (Middlesex) Cartesianism and Female
Philosophy in the
Seventeenth Century
My paper
will discuss the importance of Cartesianism as a facilitator
of women's philosophy in the early modern period. By placing
Cartesianism in historical context, I shall argue that Cartesianism
afforded an opening for women who wished to participate in
philosophical debate, and that the
critiques of Cartesianism by women philosophers must be understood
in the light of the fortuna of Descares' philosophy in the
later seventeenth century. Among the women thinkers I shall
discuss will be Princess Elizabeth, Anne Conway and Mary Astell.
6 Reception (Franklin Center)
7:30 French Buffet (Faculty Commons at Duke)
SUNDAY,
MARCH 17
Informal Ending
10-Noon Discussion (with light brunch)
Those who wish to register for the conference may do so on-line
on the Receptions conference webpage http://www.duke.edu/philosophy/descartes/index.html
The registration fee is $20. Registrants and their guests
are welcome to sign up for catered events on the webpage by
Thursday, March 7, 2002. For further information, please contact
the conference organizer, Tad Schmaltz, at tad.schmaltz@duke.edu.
QUESTIONS?
Tad
Schmaltz Department
of Philosophy 201 West Duke Bldg. Duke University Durham,
North Carolina 27708 USA Office phone: 919/660-3059 Dept.
fax: 919/660-3060 E-mail: tad.schmaltz@duke.edu
This
website was created/ce site fut créé par Frédéric
Bouchard
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