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Full Idea
My ability clearly and distinctly to understand one thing without another suffices to make me certain that the one thing is different from the other, since they can be separated from each other (at least by God).
Gist of Idea
If I can separate two things in my understanding, then God can separate them in reality
Source
René Descartes (Meditations [1641], §6.78)
Book Ref
Descartes,René: 'Discourse on Method/The Meditations', ed/tr. Sutcliffe,F.E. [Penguin 1968], p.156
15856 | A thing can become one or many, depending on how we talk about it [Plato] |
17839 | Some things are unified by their account, which rests on a unified thought about the thing [Aristotle] |
2297 | If I can separate two things in my understanding, then God can separate them in reality [Descartes] |
13160 | To exist and be understood, a multitude must first be reduced to a unity [Leibniz] |
12746 | We find unity in reason, and unity in perception, but these are not true unity [Leibniz] |
12035 | Leibniz bases pure primitive entities on conjunctions of qualitative properties [Leibniz, by Adams,RM] |
20362 | We saw unity in things because our ego seemed unified (but now we doubt the ego!) [Nietzsche] |
14252 | We should understand identity in terms of the propositions it renders true [Fine,K] |
13332 | Hierarchical set membership models objects better than the subset or aggregate relations do [Fine,K] |
14928 | Things are abstractions from structures [Ladyman/Ross] |
14481 | Wherever an object exists, there are intrinsic properties instantiating every modal profile [Thomasson] |