000 02168nam a2200313Ii 4500
653 _aPhilosophy and Psychology الفلسفة وعلم النفس
942 _cBK
_h100
_iG21U
_iG21U
999 _c30731
_d30731
001 7011161
005 20240903141521.0
008 801208s1960 inu b 00010 eng d
013 _d1951
020 _a0672601915
035 _a(OCoLC)7011161
_z(OCoLC)4019161
040 _aFHM
_erda
_cFHM
_dm.c.
_dCWR
_beng
041 _aeng
090 _aB1853.E5
_bL3 1975
100 1 _aRené Descartes
_d1596-1650
245 1 0 _aMeditations on First Philosophy /
260 _aUSA
_bBobbs-Merrill
_c1960
300 _axviii, 85
_c21 cm
505 0 _aLetter to the faculty of Theology of Paris -- Preface -- Synopsis -- Concerning things that can be doubted -- Of the nature of the human mind, and that it is more easily known than the body -- Of God : that he exists -- Of the true and the false -- Of the essence of material things, and, once more, of God: that he exists -- Of the existence of corporeal things and of the real distinction between the mind and the body [of man]
520 _aThe translation of the Meditations is taken from three sources: the second Latin edition of 1642, which was the first one printed from Descartes' own manuscript and under his own supervision, the first French translation of 1646 by Duc de Luynes, but read and approved by Descartes, and the second French translation by Clerselier. An attempt has been made in this translation to integrate these three versions into one complete and accurate edition by the use of brackets and parentheses. The reader may, by omitting the parentheses and brackets, have a translation which contains all ideas in the three versions. By omitting bracketed material, he will have a translation essentially that of the original Latin, and by omitting material in parentheses, that of the First French edition
630 _lEnglish
650 0 _aFirst philosophy
_aGeneral
650 0 _aGod
_xProof, Ontological
_vEarly works to 1800
650 0 _aMethodology
_vEarly works to 1800
650 0 _aKnowledge, Theory of
_vEarly works to 1800
700 _aLaurence J. Lafleur (tr.)