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1. INTRODUCTION
THE "NATURAL LIGHT" occupies an important position in Descartes' Third Meditation, where the meditator invokes it to provide the premises needed for his proof for the existence of a non-deceiving God. Descartes also refers to the natural light throughout his Replies to the Objections to the Meditations and in the Principles of Philosophy. Yet he says almost nothing about what the natural light is supposed to be, apparently assuming that his readers already know what he means. English-speaking commentators on Descartes have said little about the natural light,1 and although French commentators have paid slightly more attention to this topic, they have nonetheless provided no detailed analysis of the concept of the natural light and the role it plays in Descartes' Meditations.2
In 1973, however, John Morris published an article entitled "Descartes' Natural Light" in the journal of the History of Philosophy, later reprinted in Eternal Truths and the Cartesian Circle.3 Morris argues that "the understanding can be regarded in an active and a passive sense,"4 and that the natural light should be equated with the passive function of the intellect. The natural light, he asserts, is
a power of cognition, which contrasts with the "active" power of conceiving. Unlike this power, it does not form ideas, or bring them to consciousness. Instead, it simply gives a click of recognition when a true idea is brought before it.5
However, the textual evidence for Morris' interpretation of the natural light is slender, and in fact the texts support a quite different reading. I shall point out some problems with Morris' reading, and offer the beginnings of an alternative account.
2. ACTIVITY, PASSIVITY, AND THE MIND
In the Fourth Meditation, Descartes draws a distinction between two faculties of mind: intellect and will. Intellect, he says, allows him "to perceive the ideas which are subjects for possible judgements" (CSM II 39/AT VII 5),6 while the will "simply consists in our ability to do or not do something (that is, to affirm or deny, to pursue or avoid)" (CSM II 40/AT VII 57). Although he does not say so in the Fourth Meditation, Descartes suggests in two 1641 letters to Regius that the intellect is passive and the will is active; strictly speaking, he says, "understanding [intellectio]...