Descartes is often regarded as the first modern thinker to provide a philosophical framework for the
natural sciences as these began to develop. In his
Discourse on the Method he attempts to arrive at a fundamental set of principles that one can know as true without any doubt. To achieve this, he employs a method called methodological skepticism: he rejects any idea that can be doubted, and then reestablishes them in order to acquire a firm foundation for genuine knowledge.
Initially, Descartes arrives at only a single principle: thought exists. Thought cannot be separated from me, therefore, I exist (
Discourse on the Method and
Principles of Philosophy). Most famously, this is known as
cogito ergo sum (Latin: "I think, therefore I am"), or more aptly, "
Dubito, ergo cogito, ergo sum" (Latin: "I doubt, therefore I think, therefore I am"). Therefore, Descartes concluded, if he doubted, then something or someone must be doing the doubting, therefore the very fact that he doubted proved his existence.
Descartes has described his method of doubt as the following:
First, it must be noted that I have no way of knowing when I'm right or wrong. Experience tells me that I feel the same level of confidence either way.
Descartes concludes that he can be certain that he exists because he thinks. But in what form? He perceives his body through the use of the senses; however, these have previously been proven unreliable. So Descartes concludes that the only indubitable knowledge is that he is a
thinking thing. Thinking is his essence as it is the only thing about him that cannot be doubted. Descartes defines "thought" (
cogitatio) as "what happens in me such that I am immediately conscious of it, insofar as I am conscious of it". Thinking is thus every activity of a person of which he is immediately
conscious.
To further demonstrate the limitations of the senses, Descartes proceeds with what is known as the
Wax Argument. He considers a piece of wax: his senses inform him that it has certain characteristics, such as shape, texture, size, color, smell, and so forth. When he brings the wax towards a flame, these characteristics change completely. However, it seems that it is still the same thing: it is still a piece of wax, even though the data of the senses inform him that all of its characteristics are different. Therefore, in order to properly grasp the nature of the wax, he cannot use the senses: he must use his mind. Descartes concludes:
Thus what I thought I had seen with my eyes, I actually grasped solely with the faculty of judgment, which is in my mind.
In this manner, Descartes proceeds to construct a system of knowledge, discarding
perception as unreliable and instead admitting only
deduction as a method. In the third and fifth
Meditation, he offers an
ontological proof of a
benevolent God (through both the
ontological argument and
trademark argument). Because God is benevolent, he can have some faith in the account of reality his senses provide him, for God has provided him with a working mind and
sensory system and does not desire to deceive him; however, this is a contentious argument, as his very notion of a benevolent God from which he developed this argument is easily subject to the same kind of doubt as his perceptions. From this supposition, however, he finally establishes the possibility of acquiring knowledge about the world based on deduction
and perception. In terms of
epistemology therefore, he can be said to have contributed such ideas as a rigorous conception of
foundationalism and the possibility that
reason is the only reliable method of attaining knowledge.
In Descartes's system, knowledge takes the form of ideas, and philosophical investigation is the contemplation of these ideas. This concept would influence subsequent
internalist movements as Descartes's epistemology requires that a connection made by conscious awareness will distinguish knowledge from falsity. As a result of his Cartesian doubt, he sought for knowledge to be "incapable of being destroyed", in order to construct an unshakable ground upon which all other knowledge can be based. The first item of unshakable knowledge that Descartes argues for is the aforementioned
cogito, or thinking thing.
Descartes also wrote a response to
skepticism about the existence of the external world. He argues that
sensory perceptions come to him involuntarily, and are not willed by him. They are external to his senses, and according to Descartes, this is evidence of the existence of something outside of his mind, and thus, an external world. Descartes goes on to show that the things in the external world are material by arguing that God would not deceive him as to the ideas that are being transmitted, and that God has given him the "propensity" to believe that such ideas are caused by material things.