Rule VI

E198128

Rule VI is one of René Descartes’ methodological guidelines in "Rules for the Direction of the Mind," outlining a specific step in his rational procedure for attaining clear and certain knowledge.

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Label Occurrences
Rule VI canonical 1

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Statements (37)

Predicate Object
instanceOf epistemological principle
methodological guideline
philosophical rule
aim attainment of clear and certain knowledge
guiding the rational procedure of the mind
appliesTo mathematical reasoning
methodical doubt
scientific inquiry
associatedWith intuitive evidence
order and method in thinking
rational deduction
author René Descartes
concerns methodical use of reason
orderly progression of thought
countryOfOrigin France
field epistemology
philosophy of science
rationalism
genre philosophical methodology
hasContext development of the scientific method
early modern philosophy
hasWorkAuthor René Descartes
influenced later Cartesian epistemology
modern conceptions of method
influencedBy mathematical method
scholastic logic
isSectionOf Rules for the Direction of the Mind
surface form: Regulae ad directionem ingenii
language Latin
originalWorkLanguage Latin
partOf Rules for the Direction of the Mind
philosophicalDomain theory of knowledge
philosophicalGoal certainty
clarity of ideas
philosophicalTradition Cartesianism
publicationCentury 17th century
workTitle Rules for the Direction of the Mind
surface form: Regulae ad directionem ingenii
workTitleInEnglish Rules for the Direction of the Mind

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Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.