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Descartes’s influence on Western philosophy is so pervasive that all Western philosophers, even those who reject Cartesianism, can be said to be Cartesians, just as they can be said to be Greeks: their positions are essentially responses to problems posed by Descartes. Descartes also stands at the beginning of modern mathematics through his contribution to the development of the infinitesimal calculus by Newton and Leibniz. Descartes’s skeptical, mathematical method underpins modern science; his conception of rationality informed modern Western ideas of what it means to be a human being until nearly the end of the 20th century; and his intense desire to control nature in the service of humanity has been the ultimate secular goal of modern science since the time of the Enlightenment.

Richard A. Watson