Kendra’s
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(group member since Aug 26, 2016)
Kendra’s
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from the Reading Classics, Chronologically Through the Ages group.
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Its central doctrines of man’s natural and unalienable rights, of popular sovereignty, and of the right of rebellion are eloquently set forth in the opening paragraphs of the Declaration. 'That all men are endowed with certain unalienable rights,' that 'governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed,' and that when government becomes destructive of human rights, 'it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it' — these are the principles (and, for the most part, the words) which Thomas Jefferson and his associates adopted from Locke and put to good use.
While the image of good government that Locke had in mind was a constitutional monarchy, in which the legislative power of Parliament was supreme but in which the king retained certain executive prerogatives, the republican form of government set up by the Constitution of the United States is a more thoroughgoing embodiment of his ideal of government by law rather than by men. All our political liberties are rooted in the rule of law. It is this which makes constitutional government 'free government' — government that secures to all of us 'the blessings of liberty.'" Source
Jul 03, 2021 08:11AM

Susan Wise Bauer recommends reading at least "Rules" and "General Scholium"

Welcome and good luck with your reading endeavors! While we are following a reading schedule, feel free to follow your own plan and comment on old discussion posts - the conversation can continue, even if it's not our current read.
Jun 03, 2021 10:41AM



Satan's portrayal as the hero and main character of the story really is interesting. I, too, found myself rooting for him and rolling my eyes at those working against him.
Something that really stood out is the misogynistic portrayal of Eve. When the angel comes to warn them not to be deceived and sticks around to have a meal and answer their questions, Eve is dismissed when she asks about heaven and basically is told to stay in her lane. That her natural and innocent curiosity is demeaned, while Adam's is praised really rubbed me the wrong way. And then, later, when Eve is mourning her sin, she attributes her falling for the deception to being female.
I'm also newly disturbed by Adam and Eve being told to avoid knowledge and understanding. While I know I'm considering this from a perspective of a culture that highly values education and intellect, as well as the ideals of democracy, alarm bells sound when someone is told to avoid knowledge for "their own good" and to just blindly trust those who have the knowledge. In this I see the roots of how Christianity has been used to control and oppress throughout history.
I laughed when Eve suggested that a solution to their problem would be to just not have children and/or commit suicide, because that was a thought I had a few moments prior. The problem wouldn't exist if she ceased to exist, right?
Having - to use a biblical analogy - thrown off the yoke of Christianity in my own life, I was doubtful if it would be worthwhile or enjoyable to read some of these overtly Christian books, but I am finding that they allow me to re-evaluate how these concepts have influenced society throughout history, and to identify some unquestioned ideals and assumptions that are so blindly accepted in America to this day.

The character of Tartuffe represents those members of society who preach religious piety but do not themselves live by the morals they try to force upon others. Because the play focuses on the issue of religious hypocrisy, it was highly controversial at the time it was written and was banned from public performance for five years." Source

The main characters in the poem are God, Lucifer (Satan), Adam, and Eve. Much has been written about Milton’s powerful and sympathetic characterization of Satan. The Romantic poets William Blake and Percy Bysshe Shelley saw Satan as the real hero of the poem and applauded his rebellion against the tyranny of Heaven.” Source
I found this review to be extremely amusing and interesting (warning for spoilers and language)

I was raised Christian and experienced a certain degree of anguish as I wrestled with wanting so badly to believe that it was true, alongside the fact that I simply did not believe and could not force myself to do so.
While Bunyan does not wrestle so much with belief as with his personal sense of salvation, his experience portrays the more general journey of arriving at a belief. It's not usually a single moment of understanding followed by unwavering confidence. There's a lot of waffling and uncertainty and struggle as we travel to our own sturdy ground. The journey is not always linear, but we get there eventually. Bunyan did, and so did I.



Micrographia was the first important work on microscopy, the study of minute objects through a microscope. First published in 1665, it contains large-scale, finely detailed illustrations of some of the specimens Hooke viewed under the microscopes he designed. At the end of the book, there are observations of the stars and moon as seen through a telescope.
By changing our perspective, Hooke gives power and beauty to things that might otherwise be dismissed as disgusting or trivial – the surface of frozen urine, the eye of a grey drone-fly, a piece of moss, the body of a louse, an ant or a flea. Alongside the engravings, he writes entertaining accounts of his observations. Hooke is witty and even poetic, using similes to help us imagine the world he sees through his lenses.” Source

I agree it is interesting how he comes to the conclusion that his senses can be trusted. The lecture I posted above mentioned that he came to that conclusion so subtly that it took some time for the church to realize that it was actually in opposition to their teaching, and they did eventually ban the book.
As to your point about writing in the first person, I think it makes sense given that this book is, in some ways, a personal journey. I have wondered why Bauer included this book under the "autobiography" category and, while it is in no way a story of Descartes' life, it is a story about the journey of his mind. He brings the reader along with him and explains how and why he is engaging in this mental journey, so to put the book in anything but the first person would create a degree of separation between himself and his ideas.
I think Descartes' arguments become weaker in the later meditations. While built on a strong foundations (I think therefore I exist), he ventures into claims that seem to me to be more subjective.
One of the most well-known ideas popularized by Descartes is the separation between body and mind. This idea is so enmeshed in culture that it is something I didn't take the time to really consider before reading this. I didn't necessarily come to a conclusion -- I think both sides of the argument have uncertainties they need to contend with -- but this experience at least proved one of Descartes' claims: we need to observe and question the base assumptions we learned in childhood.


The Meditations is characterized by Descartes’s use of methodic doubt, a systematic procedure of rejecting as though false all types of belief in which one has ever been, or could ever be, deceived. His arguments derive from the skepticism of the Greek philosopher Sextus Empiricus (fl. 3rd century CE) as reflected in the work of the essayist Michel de Montaigne (1533–92) and the Catholic theologian Pierre Charron (1541–1603). Thus, Descartes’s apparent knowledge based on authority is set aside, because even experts are sometimes wrong. His beliefs from sensory experience are declared untrustworthy, because such experience is sometimes misleading, as when a square tower appears round from a distance. Even his beliefs about the objects in his immediate vicinity may be mistaken, because, as he notes, he often has dreams about objects that do not exist, and he has no way of knowing with certainty whether he is dreaming or awake. Finally, his apparent knowledge of simple and general truths of reasoning that do not depend on sense experience—such as “2 + 3 = 5” or “a square has four sides”—is also unreliable, because God could have made him in such a way that, for example, he goes wrong every time he counts. As a way of summarizing the universal doubt into which he has fallen, Descartes supposes that an 'evil genius of the utmost power and cunning has employed all his energies in order to deceive me.'" Source


In the Copernican system, the Earth and other planets orbit the Sun, while in the Ptolemaic system, everything in the Universe circles around the Earth. The Dialogue was published in Florence under a formal license from the Inquisition. In 1633, Galileo was found to be 'vehemently suspect of heresy' based on the book, which was then placed on the Index of Forbidden Books, from which it was not removed until 1835 (after the theories it discussed had been permitted in print in 1822)." Source

Bacon may be credited with recognizing, in their essence, the method of agreement, the joint method, and the method of concomitant variations. His emphasis on the exhaustive cataloguing of facts, however, has since been replaced as a scientific method, for it provided no means of bringing investigation to an end or of insightful delimitation of the problem by creative use of hypotheses.” (Source)

If you would prefer to only read a sample, Bauer recommends the following: Psalms 1, 2, 5, 23, 27, 51, 57, 89, 90, 91, 103, 109, 119, 121, 132, 136, 148, 150