E. M. Curley. Descartes against the Skeptics. Harvard University Press. 1978. 242pp.
From the publisher:
E. M. Curley is known for his skill at lucid exposition and cogent analysis of seventeenth-century philosophy. In this book he turns to Descartes, who remains a central figure in the Western philosophical tradition. While dealing with most of Descartes’ seminal contributions, he concentrates on the issues that pose special problems for modern students: the dream argument, knowledge of one’s own existence and mental states, the circle, the arguments for God’s existence, and the claim that mind and body are distinct.
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