Philosophy Of Descartes

In the New Merriam Webster Dictionary, sophism is defined as a plausible but fallacious argument.  In Rene Descartes Meditation V, he distinguishes the existence of God, believing he must prove that god exists before he can examine any corporeal objects outside of himself.  By proving that the existence of God is not a sophism, he also argues that God is therefore the Supreme Being and the omnipotent one.  His conclusion that God does exist enables him to prove the existence of material things, and the difference between the soul and the body.  
     Ideas, innovations, and inventions are all created from brilliant minds.  Than how did these ideas come to be?  Descartes believes that God is the cause of new innovations adding, therefore God instilled in us the idea of his existence.  Explaining, in order for us to draw an idea from a presumption or thought, than an object must have been derived not by us but rather God.  An example of his presumption of the existence of God would be the fact that if one cannot imagine a bookshelf without books.  Whether one exists or not, it is true than that they cannot be separated from each other.  Descartes follows by stating that "he cannot conceive God without existence, existence is inseparable from him."  
     After settling that God exists in his first few passages, Descartes adds that God is the perfect being.  Due to the fact that he understands what a perfect being is, than God must be a sovereign being.  Similar to his triangle theory that it is not a necessity to imagine a triangle.  It is not a necessity to imagine a perfect being rather a thought that has run through our mind.  The triangle as imagine ...
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