Cartesian Imperativism

Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 99 (4):702-725 (2017)
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Abstract

We propose a novel reading of Descartes' views on the nature of pain, thirst, and hunger: imperativism. According to imperativism, rather than (exclusively) having intentional contents individuated by a set of correctness conditions specifying the way the world is, pain thirst, and hunger have contents individuated by satisfaction conditions, which specify the way the world ought to be. Unlike representationalist treatments, the imperativist reading satisfies the unique health-preserving role Descartes sets out for pain, thirst, and hunger, without inflating his austere metaphysics of res extensa.

Author Profiles

Joseph Gottlieb
Texas Tech University
Saja Parvizian
University of Illinois, Chicago (PhD)

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