Thanks,
Daniele
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> Does Descartes, in any of his own writings, describe his animal
> vivisection experiments?
No, because (so far as I've been able to discover) he didn't perform any.
There's a peculiar and very widespread myth (which Googling shows to be
alive and well) that he did, but it seems to be a complete fabrication.
It even stretches to the claim that he essentially tortured his wife's dog
in public -- a claim which his bachelorhood and excessive fondness for his
own pet dog might be thought adequately to refute...
It may well be that people took his view of the probable nature of
non-human animals and used it to justify vivisection -- but that, of
course, is a very different matter.
It's of course *possible* that, in the course of his scientific work,
he performed vivisection (which was becoming a popular technique at the
time); does anyone on the list have any firm evidence for this?
Peter
--
Dr Peter J. King, Lecturer in Philosophy, Pembroke College, Oxford OX1 1DW
Lecturer in Philosophy, St Edmund Hall, Oxford OX1 4AR
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>>> Peter King <peter...@PMB.OX.AC.UK> 2009/03/07 01:36 AM >>>
Peter
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Hanoch
Hanoch Ben-Yami
Philosophy Department
Central European University
Budapest
http://web.ceu.hu/phil/benyami/index.htm
>>> David Spurrett <Spur...@UKZN.AC.ZA> 07/03/2009 08:59 >>>
The two best authorities on Descartes agree that he practiced
vivisection - Genevieve Rodis-Lewis and Rene Deacartes. The texts that David
Spurrett cites below look about as decisive as anyone could want, unless
someone has evidence that was unknown to Rodis-Lewis that Descartes was
lying. Descartes says at CSMK 81 that he has observed a certain vivisection
several times and that in the course of writing to Plemp is presently
carrying it out himself.
Here is an excerpt from Marjorie Grene's article. Descartes is
defending his theory that the motion of the heart and the circulation of the
blood are caused by heat in the heart. At one point he offers a theoretical
reply to one of Galen's arguments. Grene: "But then, while he is at it, he
takes the opportunity to instruct Plemp further about his own experiments in
vivisection. (The history of biology is terrible to think about; even those
who did not accept the theory of the bete-machine happily practiced
vivisection.) This passage (if one can bear it) is worth quoting in full
..." ("The heart and blood: Descartes, Plemp, and Harvey," Essays on the
Philosophy and Science of Rene Descartes, p. 327.)
Descartes talks out of both sides of his mouth on the question
whether non-human animals have feelings. But he did have a pet, even as he
maintained that such creatures are mere machines. Richard Watson has a very
interesting chapter, "Descartes's Dog," in which he speculates that it was a
good thing for "Monsieur Grat" that Descartes sent him to his friend Picot
in Paris in 1648, since Descartes practiced vivisection not only on rabbits
but also on dogs - there is a nice description of that at CSM I 317 = AT XI
241-2, just a page before the rabbit story that you cite), in which
Descartes implies but doesn't come out and say that he's carried it out
himself. (Watson, Cogito, ergo sum: The life of Rene Descartes.) Evidently
it was Malebranche (according to the common legend) and not Descartes who
extended the doctrine of bete-machine into outright viciousness.
Stephen Voss
*****
"But though I regard it as established that we cannot prove there is any thought in animals, I do not think it is thereby proved that there is not, since the human mind does not reach into their hearts."
Descartes, Letter to H. More 1649 (Kenny 1970)
Ian Ground
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-----Original Message-----
From: Philosophy in Europe [mailto:PHIL...@liverpool.ac.uk] On Behalf Of Hanoch Ben-Yami
Sent: 07 March 2009 09:46
To: PHIL...@liverpool.ac.uk
Subject: Re: Descartes and vivisection
Levent
E.M.U
Eastern Mediterranean University
Roy
Dr. Roy Ahmad Jackson,
Senior Lecturer in Religion, Philosophy and Ethics,
University of Gloucestershire
Francis Close Hall
Swindon Road
Cheltenham
GL50 4AZ
Tel. 01242 715313
Email: rjac...@glos.ac.uk
-----Original Message-----
From: Philosophy in Europe [mailto:PHIL...@liverpool.ac.uk] On Behalf
Of Hanoch Ben-Yami
Sent: 07 March 2009 09:46
To: PHIL...@liverpool.ac.uk
Subject: Re: Descartes and vivisection
Why do you think it's a fabrication? And he repeats his description of
the operation on a rabbit's heart almost a decade later, in his
_Description_, AT XI 243. Besides, there's another passage in his
letters, containing a description of observations he made on a living
eel's heart (to Plempius, 23 March 1638, AT II 66).
Hanoch
Hanoch Ben-Yami
Philosophy Department
Central European University
Budapest
http://web.ceu.hu/phil/benyami/index.htm
>>> David Spurrett <Spur...@UKZN.AC.ZA> 07/03/2009 08:59 >>>
Peter
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John D Greenwood
Professor of Philosophy
City College & Graduate Center
City University of New York
Roy
Dr. Roy Ahmad Jackson,
University of Gloucestershire
Francis Close Hall
Swindon Road
Cheltenham
GL50 4AZ
Tel. 01242 715313
Email: rjac...@glos.ac.uk
Hanoch
Peter
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