Content area
Full Text
ARIEW, Roger. Descartes and the Last Scholastics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1999. xiv + 230 pp. Cloth, $42.50-Roger Ariew begins this book with the following sensible claim: "A philosophical system cannot be studied adequately apart from the intellectual context in which it is situated" (p. 1). His book, naturally enough, attempts to demonstrate the way in which Descartes responded to and affected the philosophical world of late Scholasticism. The ten chapters themselves are all previously, or soon to be, published essays, unified by the view that our knowledge of late Scholasticism is deeply imperfect and that our resulting picture of Descartes is also imperfect. Each chapter provides an example of how, with a proper understanding of Scholastic philosophy, we arrive at a slightly different and more refined picture of Descartes. Indeed, Ariew's work is the product of an admirably broad and detailed knowledge of the works of the major (and minor) thinkers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; Toletus, Suarez, Eustachius, Basso, Clavius, Dupleix, Mersenne, Arnauld, and many others are the actors in this drama of the rise of Cartesianism.