The father of modern philosophy, Rene Descartes, once said, “I think; therefore, I am”. The famous quote means thinking is the only way individuals know that they exist in this world. A more simplex way of putting it is, “I am able to think, therefore I exist”. Descartes provided philosophical proof how someone capable of producing thoughts are real, since thoughts can’t be fake. As a French Philosopher and mathematician, Descartes was an extremely educated man. At the early age of 8 years old, he attended the Jesuit College of Henri IV. 14 years later, at 22 years old, he earned his degree in law at the University of Poitiers. Instead of using his degree to become a lawyer, a teacher persuaded Descartes to apply his knowledge of mathematics and logic to …show more content…
The opening line of her book means there are no differences between men and women. Every human being, male or female, are supposedly born with the same rights. However, when young girls grow up to women, they will have their rights taken away from them as society allows men to have more privileges than women. Over a woman’s life, she would be shaped by the situations in her life and influenced by her role in society. Simone de Beauvoir was a French writer, political activist, social theorist, and a feminist who significantly influenced feminist existentialism and feminist theory. De Beauvoir is known for her treatise The Second Sex, where she analyzed women’s oppression and the foundation of contemporary feminism. In the Second Sex, de Beauvoir describes how women’s attitude towards her body and bodily functions changes over time, while including how society influences a woman’s attitude. Just like in society, in her treatise, women are both oppressed and free. De Beauvoir embraces how women are in charge of their own bodies. It all depends on how a woman sees herself, if she’s a free woman or an object for society to look