Enthusiasm and Platonic furor in the Origins of Cartesian Science: The Olympian Dreams

  1. Gómez López, Susana 1
  1. 1 Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Revista:
Early Science and Medicine

ISSN: 1383-7427 1573-3823

Año de publicación: 2020

Volumen: 25

Número: 5

Páginas: 507-535

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.1163/15733823-00255P04 GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso abierto editor

Otras publicaciones en: Early Science and Medicine

Resumen

In the Olympica, the lost manuscript wherein Descartes described his famous three dreams, he wrote that on the night of Saint Martin in 1619 he felt asleep in a state of enthusiasm. He interpreted the dreams that ensued as the divine revelation of the principles of a new and admirable science. I here propose that the Olympica were a literary fiction devised by Descartes to legitimize his arrival on the philosophical scene by proposing the principles of a new science. The function of dreams as the best way to reach true wisdom is in line with a long philosophical tradition. This paper offers an attempt to understand the Cartesian enthusiasm in its context, that is, before the criticism of enthusiasm as something incompatible with reason became widespread and when it was still linked to the Platonic theory of furor – poetic and divine – the state that allows the subject access to the truth.