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Thomas C. Vinci. Cartesian Truth. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. Pp. xv + 270. Cloth, $45.00.
The book jacket copy claims that Cartesian Truth merits "serious consideration by both contemporary analytic philosophers and postmodern thinkers." Yet the work is written in a decidedly analytic idiom, and it is keyed primarily to recent analytic discussions of epistemological foundationalism. Moreover, what is most valuable is not its comments concerning the relevance of Descartes to these discussions, but rather its admirably clear rational reconstruction of Descartes' own epistemology. In fact, this study usefully distinguishes two different but interrelated epistemological theories in Descartes. The first is connected to Descartes' "project of pure inquiry" (to borrow Bernard Williams' phrase), a project involving the attempt to derive truths a priori from the "rule of truth," that is, the rule that whatever one clearly and distinctly perceives is true. The first three chapters of Vinci's work consider this aprioristic project. The last four chapters focus on the project in Descartes of providing an epistemology of sense experience that allows for nonintellectual knowledge of the material world. Vinci makes some original and insightful claims about these projects and their interconnections.
Vinci begins by defending a reading of the rule of truth which requires (roughly) that clearly...





