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Cartesian Questions III: Descartes Beneath the Mask of Cartesianism

Contributor(s): Marion, Jean-Luc (Author), Lewis, Stephen E (Translator)

ISBN: 9781503643338

Publisher: Stanford University Press

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Pub Date: August 5, 2025

Dewey: 194

LCCN: 2025003432

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.25 lbs) 382 pages

Series: Cultural Memory in the Present

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Description:

In this masterful work, Jean-Luc Marion shows how some of Descartes' most decisive points remain masked by the various "Cartesianisms" that historiography and convenient simplifications alike have constructed. The book's first half shows how Descartes lines up against Cartesianism, setting forth several closely argued attempts to free up the positive status of skepticism in the Cartesian corpus, the non-substantial (and non-reflexive) character of the ego cogito, the complex elaboration of the idea of the infinite, and the role of esteem as a mode of the cogitatio. Marion then offers a second set of studies examining the work of Montaigne, Hobbes, and Spinoza and seeking to reconstitute some of the ways in which Cartesianism (and non-Cartesianism) become opposed to Descartes. Arising at the pivot point between these two paths of inquiry is a chapter dedicated to Descartes and phenomenology, with particular focus on how Descartes can be understood to have practiced-in his own way and by anticipation-a genuine phenomenological reduction. The final volume in Jean-Luc Marion's erudite trilogy of Cartesian Questions, this authoritative book demonstrates that, rather than belonging strictly to the past, Descartes continues to speak to our future.

Review Quotes: "In his great work, Jean-Luc Marion peels back the Cartesian masks to reveal an authentic Descartes from beneath the layers of interpretations and commentaries by Cartesians and anti-Cartesians, also discussing those, such as Montaigne and Hobbes, whose work constrained him or set up false expectations for his philosophy. This is a marvelous enterprise which initiates Marion's renewed efforts to read, reread, and rethink the Cartesian corpus from end to end." --Roger Ariew, Distinguished University Professor, University of South Florida

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