Descartes Voetius Anals PDF
Descartes Voetius Anals PDF
Descartes Voetius Anals PDF
Dragoș Vădana
MIHAI-DRAGOȘ VĂDANA1
Abstract
The theological aspect of the dispute between the modern philosopher René
Descartes, and the Calvinist theologian, Gisbertus Voetius, remains a chapter
insufficiently explored in Cartesian studies. This paper highlights a set of objections on
natural theology addressed by Descartes and Voetius to each other. It shows and
expands the common ground Descartes and Voetius held within natural theology. It
argues that their contrasting views revolved mainly around the limits of natural
theology. For Voetius, natural theology is extrinsically limited by the revealed God, the
external principle of faith. For Descartes, metaphysics or natural theology is intrinsically
limited by the incomprehensible idea of the Infinite.
Keywords: natural theology, innate knowledge, incomprehensibility, Descartes, Voetius.
I. Introduction
2 See Erik-Jan Bos’ study (1999) on the date of Descartes’ Lettre Apologétique.
DESCARTES AND VOETIUS ON THE INNATE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
AND THE LIMITS OF NATURAL THEOLOGY
39
(…) all those things whose knowledge is said to be naturally implanted (a naturam
indita) in us are not for that reason expressly known by us; they are merely such
that we come to know them by the power of our own native intelligence, without
any sensory experience (…) Such is our knowledge of God: and when you [Voetius]
conclude, in your Thersites and in your books on atheism [De Atheismo], that
nobody is speculatively an atheist, that is, that there is no one who doesn’t
recognize in some way the existence of God, you fall in an absurdity of the same
magnitude just as if, from the fact that all the geometrical truths are said to be
innate in the same way, you will conclude that there is no one in the world who
doesn’t know the elements of Euclid. (CSMK III 222, AT VIII-2 167-166)3
According to John Platt (1982), from the death of Calvin to the first
half of the 17th century we witness a transition from Calvin’s theology to
That there exists in the human minds and indeed by natural instinct (naturali
instinctu), some sense of Deity (divinitatis sensum), we hold to be beyond dispute,
since God himself, to prevent any man from pretending ignorance, has endued
(indidit) all men with some idea (intelligentiam) of his Godhead, the memory of
which he constantly renews and occasionally enlarges, that all to a man being
aware that there is a God, and that he is their Maker, may be condemned by their
own conscience when they neither worship him nor consecrate their lives to his
service. (Calvin 1854, 50)
We call theoretical (theoretica) those (i.e. principles) the true object of whose goal is
contemplation, of which the universal and primary sort are, nothing can at the
same time exist and not exist etc. and the particular 1. God exists. 2. He is the
Creator. 3. He is the Ruler. 4. He is the Judge. (Romans 1, 19, 30). The practical
(practica) are those whose object is the carrying out of that aim by action. The
universal and primary sort, proceeding indeed from the theoretical, are good is to
DESCARTES AND VOETIUS ON THE INNATE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
AND THE LIMITS OF NATURAL THEOLOGY
41
[We draw the conclusion not that] the knowledge of God would be something
actual or elicited by the newborn baby: or that the intelligible species would be
instilled at the same time with intellect and memory, such that the learnings
(μαθήσεις) of the adults would not be anything else but anamneses (αναμνήσεις)
(the learnings are reminiscent, as Tertulian translated), what Plato wanted. Not at
all: because regarding actual knowledge, Aristotle rightly said: the mind of man
is worth a blank slate (…) And if it were the case that the child was raised in
solitude, someone else would never present the terms of this axiom, that “God
exists”; still, we believe he will reach that actual knowledge [that God exists] from
an innate sagacity (αγχίνοια) but not without previous observation, induction and
reasoning, which do not require so much toil. (Voetius 1648, 141-142)
[This habitus of principles or that natural power of the intellect] Comprises (…)
the truth of the principles, partly theoretical (theoretica), partly practical (practica),
without a discourse or a demonstration, as in a simple perceptual seizing. The
theoretical ones are either universal: nothing can at the same time be and not be;
or particular, and first of all: God exists. Then: He is the Creator, the Ruler, the
Judge. The practical ones are universal: the good must be known, the bad must be
avoided. Insofar as the particular [principles] are concerned: first of all: God must
be adored: Then, what you don’t want done to you, don’t do to others, etc. (…)
The particular principles, on the one hand theoretical, on the other hand practical,
constitute in a proprietary and formal way the implanted natural theology.
(Voetius 1648, 141)
(…) the natural habitus of the principles, or that power of the human intellect (…)
cannot be separated from their subjects without entailing contradiction.
(Voetius 1648, 146)
The external negation of God, as well as the mean and hypocritical protest,
usually taking place with verbal contention, is not the same with the internal
science and with the negation of conscience; on the contrary, the former is not
included in the latter, and neither is it necessarily united with and inseparable
(ἀχωρίστος) from the latter. (Voetius 1648, 148)
I never wrote or concluded that the mind required innate ideas which were in
some way different from its faculty of thinking; but when I observed the existence
in me of certain thoughts which proceeded, not from external objects or from the
determination of my will, but solely from the faculty of thinking within me, then,
in order that I might distinguish the ideas or notions (which are the forms of
these thoughts) from other thoughts adventitious or factitious, I termed the
former “innate.” In the same sense we say that in some families generosity is
innate, in others certain diseases like gout or stones, not that on this account the
babies of these families suffer from these diseases in their mother’s womb, but
that they are born with a certain disposition or propensity (quamdam dispositione
sive facultate) for contracting them.” (AT VIII-2 357-358)5
[O] But because the idea that we have of God and of ourselves is innate, shouldn’t
the mind of the child thus have an actual idea of God? [R] It would be bold to
affirm that because we do not have in this domain any decisive argument. The
contrary seems otherwise probable, because during infancy the mind is so
immersed in the body such that its only thoughts are those drawn from the
affections of the body. (AT V 149-150)
Because the conception that grasps without any connection the quiddity of the
thing according to its nature is always true per se (…) Per accidens it is still
admitted that it occurs: even if it [the intellect] doesn’t compose, [however] through a
simple act it attributes to a thing that which is not found in it. (Voetius 1659, 695)
There exists a infallible principle out of which faith is firstly drawn and proved,
and in which faith is ultimately solved, but human reason isn’t like this (…)
because the last solution of the faithful is not through which or because of which I
understand, comprehend, thus judge, this being the reason why it pertains to
faith, but because God thus speaks in the Scripture, this is why it pertains to faith,
and as a consequence, I thus judge, and must judge and believe (…) so that the
reason of the infallibility of faith is in and from the word of God, not in and from
the human reason as a principle. (Voetius 1648, 2)
It does not matter that I do not grasp the infinite (non comprehendam infinitum), or
that there are countless additional attributes of God which I cannot in any way grasp,
and perhaps cannot even reach in my thought; for it is in the nature of the infinite (de
ratione infiniti) not to be grasped by a finite being like myself. It is enough that I
understand the infinite, and that I judge (sufficit me hoc ipsum intelligere, ac judicare) that
all the attributes which I clearly perceive (clare percipio) and know (scio) to imply some
perfection – and perhaps countless others of which I am ignorant (atque etiam forte alia
innumera quae ignoro) – are present in God either formally or eminently. This is
enough to make the idea that I have of God the truest and most clear and distinct
(maxime vera, et maxime clara et distincta) of all my ideas. (CSM II 32, AT VII 46)
idea, regarding the number of its attributes, is that, beside what I clearly
perceive, I know that there are problematically other attributes that I do
not know. Without the recognition of this unknowable dimension of the
idea of the infinite being, its idea would become either the infinite itself,
comprising all the attributes, impossible to conceive by the finite human
mind, or a finite idea, inadequate in any sense to the infinite being.
IV. Conclusions
and the theologian would have met and would have agreed, each of
them from their own perspective. But then again, a dispute is not
nourished only with contrasting ideas.
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