🏛 Western Thought

Cartesianism — Thought

"I doubt, therefore I am"

René Descartes · 17세기

💡 TL;DR

Cartesianism — Thought — "I doubt, therefore I am". Descartes's cogito was the search for an indestructible starting point.

📜 Origin

On a cold November night in 1619, the soldier Descartes had three dreams in a small heated room in Ulm. Awakening, he resolved to doubt everything — what books taught, what senses reported, even mathematical truths. Yet the doubter himself could not be doubted — doubting requires a doubter. "Cogito, ergo sum" — I think, therefore I am. From this one line, modern philosophy began.

💡 Meaning

Descartes's cogito was the search for an indestructible starting point. From one unbreakable point, he believed, all certainty could be rebuilt. That point: the thinking self. This discovery moved truth from religion, monarchy, and tradition into the individual — modernity's true beginning.

🌏 Eastern Classic Cross-link

Zhuangzi, Qiwulun: "I and you cannot know each other." We are each trapped in our own minds. Zhuangzi saw self-isolation 2,000 years before Descartes — but East and West parted ways. Descartes built upon the isolation; Zhuangzi made a joke of it.

Compressed into One Hanja

"思" = 田 (field) + 心 (heart) — "the field of the heart." Ancients saw thought rising not from the head but the chest. If the heart is a field, thinking is its tilling. Descartes's thought and the East's 思 depict the same posture — turning over the soil of the mind with doubt, finding seeds of truth there.

🌐 Modern Application

The scientific method, "first principles thinking" (Elon Musk), critical-thinking education, and the foundations of individualist constitutions.

⚠️ Caveat

A side effect was the hardening of mind-body dualism — after Descartes, the West grew prone to treating the body as a machine.

🔗 Related Thoughts

To explore the hanja deeper

📜 Cheonjamun 1000 Hanja →