this post was submitted on 09 Apr 2026
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Jokes aside, this is kinda the opposite of Descartes' point. He was doubting everything, and that included his own existence.
In fact, literally the only thing he could be sure of was that he was doubting, not that he was thinking, which is why it's so weird to me that everyone leaves off the first part of the idea, since it's arguably the most important part.
Dubito, ergo cogito. Cogito, ergo sum.
I doubt, therefore I think. I think, therefore I am.
Doubt is the origin of wisdom.
Woah, I had no idea you were on Lemmy/still alive.
I still think, therefore I still am.
Existence. by Calvin Klein
I don’t understand. The opposite of saying “I exist” is “I don’t exist.” Doubting one’s existence, as in the first half of the first sentence, means asking “Do I really exist?” And he very quickly answers that by extrapolating that in order to ask that there must be some thinking thing to ask it, and that thinking thing is the self, therefore regardless of anything else, the self exists. What am I missing here?
He literally said, "I doubt, therefore I think", and you say he was not thinking? I feel like maybe you're not thinking.
If you're sure of one thing and the conclusion of that surety is believing another thing then you are sure of both things.
You must not have been very good at geometry proofs in high school. Even though yes, both are true at the same time, one can't know that initially because one leads to the other. Descartes couldn't conclude that he was thinking until he had concluded that he was doubting.