Contrary to pre-existing Cartesian philosophy, he maintained that we are born without innate ideas, and that knowledge is instead determined only by experience derived from sense perception.
Cubism, for example, posits a breakdown of single-point perspective and the Cartesian philosophy underlying it.
Philosophy (at least historical Cartesian philosophy) seeks this state.
The evil demon, sometimes referred to as the evil genius, is a concept in Cartesian philosophy.
According to the senate's statement, Cartesian philosophy was to be suppressed because:
Modern linguistics hasn't dealt with, or rather hasn't fully acknowledged, problems raised by Cartesian philosophy.
In Cartesian philosophy, the phrase deus deceptor is sometimes used to discuss the possibility of an evil God that seeks to deceive us.
The first to suggest the similarities between the two was Pierre Daniel Huet, originally a follower then an opponent of Cartesian philosophy.
He inclined to the doctrines of Gassendi rather than to those of the Cartesian philosophy.
Not enough can ever be said about the damage caused by Cartesian philosophy.