The Cartesian Crisis
Sun 10:21 am +00:00, 19 Apr 2026The Cartesian Crisis is a modern, societal crisis where individuals cannot distinguish reality from AI-manufactured falsehoods, leading to a collapse of trust, truth, and shared reality. Driven by algorithmically distorted information and institutional failure, it creates a “post-truth” world, echoing René Descartes’ original skepticism about sensory experience.
Key Aspects of the Crisis:
Definition: A societal inability to trust information, where reality becomes unverifiable, potentially leading to social disorder.
Causes: AI-generated misinformation, algorithmic suppression of information, the failure of traditional knowledge institutions, and a cultural rejection of objective truth.
Context: The term draws on the philosophical concept of “Cartesian anxiety”—the fear that there is no stable, objective foundation for knowledge.
Result: The potential for total informational control, societal unrest, and the erosion of privacy.
Philosophical Roots
Cartesian Skepticism: Named after René Descartes, this involves doubting all beliefs to find absolute certainty (e.g., questioning if one is dreaming or being deceived by an “evil genius”).
“Cogito, ergo sum”: Descartes found his foundational certainty in the fact that he was doubting, which established his existence as a thinking being (“I think, therefore I am”).
Comparison with Other Concepts
Cartesian Anxiety: A term coined by Richard J. Bernstein for the feeling of vertigo when there is no stable ground for knowledge.
Cartesian Circle: A logical problem where Descartes’ proof of God relies on clear perception, but his trust in perception relies on God.
Cartesian Dualism: The belief that human beings consist of an independent mind and a physical body.
The crisis suggests a move from a world where the human mind is the center of knowledge to a postmodern era where algorithmic, unverified information overrides personal experience











