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The author, Atkinson, who included the quote, adds about Western secular tradition on the following page of the same book-
"Descartes placed the I-as-thinker' at the centre of existence; all else is incidental. The implications for understanding human life were profound. First, human mind was given the place formerly reserved for God-as the organising principle of human existence. and in fact all life.
Second, the human body and the rest of the world were radically separated from the mind, assigned a subsidiary position, and thus took on a special character.
Third, the human mind was viewed as logical -even mathematical-device.
Fourth and finally, cognition was reduced to what we now consider just one of its forms: consciousness.
The portrait of mind entailed by these four principles -as logical, conscious, radically isolated, and virtually godlike in its powers- effected a 'Copernican Revolution' in thinking about thinking and thinking about being. The resulting worldview has sometimes been called 'cognitivism'....
Cartesian-inspired cognitivism [i.e. the secular views of Descartes] has dominated Western thought since the 17th century. "
The above in a nutshell characterises Descartes view and by extension Western philosophical tradition as the idea the human mind, logic, intellect and rationalisation as the highest form of [inner] wisdom in the universe.
It can only by guided and nurtured by itself. Everything everywhere can be understood, explained and measured by the [human] mind mathematically and scientifically eventually.
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