📘 Summary – Discourse on the Method (1637)

Author: René Descartes


Genre: Philosophical essay (written in French, which was rare at the time)


Goal: To find a method for reaching certain knowledge, just like in mathematics.

🧠 Central idea:

Descartes seeks a universal method to reason correctly and reach the truth. He wants to build solid knowledge that doesn’t rely on the senses or opinions.

🧱 The 4 rules of the method:

In Part 2, Descartes lays out his famous method in four rules:

  1. Evidence: Accept nothing as true unless it is clearly evident.
  2. Analysis: Break down problems into as many small parts as needed.
  3. Synthesis: Move from the simplest ideas to the more complex.
  4. Review: Make thorough checks to be sure nothing is left out.

💭 Methodical doubt:

In Part 4, Descartes doubts everything (the senses, science, dreams…), but realizes he cannot doubt the fact that he is doubting. Therefore, “I think, therefore I am” (Cogito, ergo sum) becomes the first certain truth.

🧍‍♂️ Man and reason:

According to Descartes, reason is equally distributed among all people. It’s not intelligence that differs, but how we use it. That’s why he offers a method that anyone can apply.

🔬 Science and God:

He applies his method to science and proves the existence of God as a guarantee of truth (a perfect God wouldn’t deceive us). He wants to rebuild knowledge from clear, certain foundations.

🗣️ Style of the book:

Descartes writes in French in a clear and personal tone. The Discourse is also an intellectual autobiography: he shares his journey, doubts, travels, and his rejection of traditional teachings.

📌 Key points to remember for the exam:

  • Main theme: Reason as the foundation of knowledge
  • Key concepts: doubt, method, truth, subjectivity, rationalism
  • Famous quote: « I think, therefore I am. »
  • Related topics: Truth, Reason, Consciousness, Science, Human being
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