During meditation, Descartes' Meditation Descartes aims to eliminate all knowledge that may be suspected. He used the rotten apple analogy in a bucket. There I had to investigate to remove all the apple and decide which apple to leave. Mr. Descartes said that people may get the wrong information, like a rotten apple. Therefore, this information error can lead to erroneous knowledge. According to Descartes' reasonable approach, if facts can be suspected, it can not be considered a certain truth and hence may be ignored.
My paper is about Rene de Carte's second meditation. In the second meditation, the famous motto of Rene Descartes is "Cogito, Ergo Sum" or "I think this is my favorite" and as I am also, I think the concepts and ideas presented by Rene Descartes I analyzed and decided to criticize. Finding his second meditation is the most controversial and interesting thing in his meditation. The second meditation is the most controversial meditation in Descartes meditation. Because his first question method is explicitly introduced. And this is also his idea of getting radical, because it shows that every kind of knowledge must be criticized and that people have to doubt everything, including himself.
Discussed three meditations of Descartes. His first meditation was called "meditation I: suspicious thing". In this meditation, Descartes recalls that he was deceived by his feeling, and that it has been happening since then, and that may also happen. So he told himself that my beliefs were dangerous and uncertain if I were deceived. It is the recognition of the first meditation that is called the second meditation "meditation II: about the essence of the human mind: it is known better than the body". Descartes believes that he must be present because he is "thoughtful". He can be deceived and can possess ideas and beliefs, so he must exist. His third meditation "Meditation III: About God, He is present" believes that God exists and he rejects the idea that God was invented. He proposed three perspectives; innate, factual and accidental. Descartes believes that God is a natural idea, he is not improvised