
Descartes, René
Oeuvres de Descartes, précédées de l'éloge de René Descartes par Thomas
OEUVRES DE DESCARTES. - TOME PREMIER - PUBLIÉES PAR VICTOR COUSIN.
ÉLOGE DE RENÉ DESCARTES, - PAR THOMAS,
NOTES SUR L'ÉLOGE DE DESCARTES.
DISCOURS DE LA MÉTHODE.
DISCOURS DE LA MÉTHODE POUR BIEN CONDUIRE SA RAISON, ET CHERCHER LA VÉRITÉ DANS LES SCIENCES.
PREMIÈRE PARTIE.
SECONDE PARTIE.
TROISIÈME PARTIE.
In this foundational work, the author invites us to step back from the noisy claims of his time and examine how true knowledge can be built from the ground up. He begins by questioning every belief that rests on habit or tradition, urging a disciplined practice of doubt that clears the path for fresh insight.
From that skeptical footing, he outlines a simple yet powerful method: break complex problems into manageable parts, examine each with rigorous logic, and reconstruct understanding piece by piece. The famous declaration “I think, therefore I am” emerges as the first indubitable truth, opening a new way of seeing the mind’s role in grasping reality. Listeners will discover how this approach reshaped philosophy, science, and everyday reasoning, offering a timeless toolkit for anyone who wishes to think more clearly and confidently.
Language
fr
Duration
~11 hours (683K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Miranda van de Heijning, Renald Levesque and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica)
Release date
2004-10-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1596–1650
Best known for the line "I think, therefore I am," this 17th-century thinker helped change how people approach philosophy, science, and mathematics. His ideas about doubt, reason, and the relationship between mind and body still shape modern thought.
View all books
by René Descartes

by René Descartes

by René Descartes

by Walter Scott

by Surendranath Dasgupta

by Jane Austen

by Émile Durkheim

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche