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Summary
This text describes the intellectual structure of modern science as a body of knowledge produced by the Cartesian method. For Descartes, science was possible only because of certain features of the very nature of human beings. Peter A. Schouls focuses on two largely neglected aspects of Descartes's position: the intellectual imagination and free will. Joining these topics together within the context of Cartesian doctrine, the author opens up a new reading of the "Meditations" and a more complete picture of Descartes as a scientist. Peter A. Schouls asserts that Descartes viewed the intellectual imagination, the source of hypotheses, as crucial to the development of scientific thought. Descartes placed considerable emphasis on mental power in his discussion of the paths by which humans were to proceed in science - from pure to applied disciplines. Schouls explores the roles of different kinds of imagination in metaphysics, in pure physics or geometry and in the applied sciences. He argues further that, for Descartes, free will was also indispensable in the pursuit of knowledge - as without it, the scientific enterprise could neither start nor continue. The book closes with a discussion of the metaphysical bases of free will, intellectual imagination and other human functions necessary to the advancement of science.
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