Portrait of Rene Descartes

Rene Descartes

Cogito ergo sum

Early Modern influential 125 sayings

Sayings by Rene Descartes

I am certain that I am a thinking thing, and that I have a body, and that I am distinct from my body.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation VI
General Unverifiable

The greatest good is to live with reason, and therefore, to live without passions.

1645 — Letter to Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia
General Unverifiable

I know that I exist, but I do not know what I am.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation II
General Unverifiable

The mind is more easily known than the body.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation II
General Unverifiable

It is proper to a philosopher to doubt everything, at least once.

1644 — Principles of Philosophy, Part I, Principle I
General Unverifiable

I think, therefore I am a doubt.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation II
General Unverifiable

The soul is not in the body as a pilot in his ship, but intimately joined and intermingled with it.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation VI
Religious Unverifiable

I am a thinking substance, that is, a mind, or soul, or intellect, or reason.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation II
Religious Unverifiable

The existence of God is a necessary consequence of my idea of God.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation III
Religious Unverifiable

I have always held that the two questions, God and the Soul, were the chief of those which ought to be demonstrated by the help of philosophy rather than of theology.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Dedicatory Letter to the Sorbonne
Religious Unverifiable

Our knowledge of the external world is derived from our senses, and our senses are often unreliable.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation I
General Unverifiable

The nature of the mind is entirely distinct from that of the body.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation VI
General Unverifiable

I found it possible to reject all my former beliefs, and to admit nothing as true that I had not clearly conceived.

1637 — Discourse on Method, Part IV
General Unverifiable

The existence of God is as certain as any geometrical demonstration.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation III
Religious Unverifiable

The chief cause of human error is the confused nature of our perceptions.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation IV
General Unverifiable

The light of natural reason shows us that there is a God.

1644 — Principles of Philosophy, Part I, Principle XX
Religious Unverifiable

I am a thinking thing, that is to say a mind, or a soul, or an understanding, or a reason.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation II
Religious Unverifiable

The greatest good for man is to live according to reason.

1645 — Letter to Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia
General Unverifiable

I resolved to seek no other knowledge than that which I might find within myself, or in the great book of the world.

1637 — Discourse on Method, Part I
General Unverifiable

The existence of God is clearly demonstrated by the very idea of God.

1641 — Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation III
Religious Unverifiable
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