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    Descartes equates bodily and spatial extension to reject ... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Space is not a separate, incorporeal entity independent of matter for Descartes

    Descartes equates bodily and spatial extension to reject any view treating space as independent of matter (Pr II 9)

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    Conceiving corporeal substance as distinct from its extension leads to the confu...Space is not a separate, incorporeal entity independent of matter for Descartes

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    Related to the alleged circularity of the definitions of motion and body, as well as the problem of resting bodies, is the difficulty in reconciling Descartes’ definition of “substance” with his claim that individual bodies are substances. If, as Descartes believes, substances are not dependent on other things in order to exist (Pr I 51), then any part of extension (which is a body, via Pr II 10, as explained above) would not qualify as a substance since it depend on its contiguous neighbors to

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