Passions of the Soul

· Hackett Publishing
eBook
191
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Translator's Introduction
Introduction by Genevieve Rodis-Lewis

The Passions of the Soul:

Preface

PART I:  About the Passions in General, and Incidentally about the Entire Nature of Man

PART II:  About the Number and Order of the Passions, and the Explanation of the Six Primitives

PART III:  About the Particular Passions

Lexicon: Index to Lexicon
Bibliography
Index
Index Locorum

About the author

Best known for the quote from his Meditations de prima philosophia, or Meditations on First Philosophy (1641), "I think therefore I am," philosopher and mathematician Rene Descartes also devoted much of his time to the studies of medicine, anatomy and meteorology. Part of his Discourse on the Method for Rightly Conducting One's Reason and Searching for the Truth in the Sciences (1637) became the foundation for analytic geometry. Descartes is also credited with designing a machine to grind hyperbolic lenses, as part of his interest in optics. Rene Descartes was born in 1596 in La Haye, France. He began his schooling at a Jesuit college before going to Paris to study mathematics and to Poitiers in 1616 to study law. He served in both the Dutch and Bavarian military and settled in Holland in 1629. In 1649, he moved to Stockholm to be a philosophy tutor to Queen Christina of Sweden. He died there in 1650. Because of his general fame and philosophic study of the existence of God, some devout Catholics, thinking he would be canonized a saint, collected relics from his body as it was being transported to France for burial.

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