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Atlas of Thinkers
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Elisabeth of Bohemia

Early Modern
Elisabeth of Bohemia writes to Descartes from The Hague, mind-body question in candlelit correspondence.
How does mind move body?
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Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of the Winter King, Frederick V, and lived in exile in The Hague. She studied mathematics, languages, and philosophy. In 1643 she wrote to Descartes asking how an immaterial mind could cause physical movement. Her question exposed the deepest weakness of Cartesian dualism. Descartes tried to answer her and failed. Their correspondence, which continued until his death, covers not only metaphysics but ethics, the passions, and the good life. She eventually became Abbess of Herford in Germany. She is the reason we know that Descartes' system had a crack at its center.

Birth
1618 CE

Born in The Hague

Born Princess Elisabeth of the Palatinate, daughter of the exiled 'Winter King' Frederick V. She grew up in The Hague, displaced from her family's lands, and received an unusually thorough education in languages, mathematics, and philosophy.

Words

“I beg you to tell me how the soul of a human being can determine the bodily spirits to perform voluntary actions, being only a thinking substance.”

— Elisabeth of Bohemia
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