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Overview
Anglophone philosophers have on the whole overlooked much of the last ten years or so of Descartes' philosophical career. In the period following publication of the Meditations, however, Descartes was extremely active in attempting to develop a comprehensive ethics, rooted in his analysis of human passions. His work in this area grew out of a lengthy correspondence with Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia and was later systematically presented in the Passions of the Soul. The present volume is the first collection of essays dealing specifically with this aspect of Descartes' thinking. It is thus a valuable contribution to our understanding of the first modern philosopher.
Since in the Passions Descartes provides us with the most sophisticated and extended discussion of the composite human being anywhere in his writings, this volume is an indispensable aid to understanding the full scope of Cartesian anthropology. Just what is the nature of the passions? Does Descartes' analysis of the passions undercut his dualism? How do the passions both contribute to our good, and, if we are not careful, prevent us from recognizing it? How can the passions be regulated rationally? How do the passions affect our freedom?
These and other questions are addressed in these original and insightful articles, all by leading Descartes scholars.
Synopsis
"Regrettably, philosophers have generally overlooked much of Descartes's later philosophical career. In the period following the publication in French of his ground-breaking work, Meditation, however, he was extremely eager to develop a comprehensive ethics, rooted in his analysis of human passions. His work in this area, later systematized in The Passions of the Soul, grew out of a lengthy correspondence with Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia concerning the union of the mind and the body. Passion and Virtue in Descartes is the first collection of essays dealing specifically with this aspect of Descartes's thinking, and is thus a valuable contribution to the critical literature on his philosophy as a whole." "Since the Passions provides us with the most sophisticated and extended discussion of the composite human being anywhere in Descartes's writings, this volume - divided into three sections, covering the Passions, what is meant by "Cartesian passions," and Descartes's moral philosophy - is an indispensable aid to understanding the full scope of Cartesian anthropology." Many compelling questions and intriguing issues are addressed in ten original and insightful articles, by Descartes scholars Lisa Shapiro, Deborah Brown, Calvin Normore, Lilli Alanen, Jean-Marie Beyssade, Ronald de Sousa, Daisie Radner, John Marshall, Andre Gombay, Paul Hoffman, and Byron Williston.