The result of a whole biography that had thought as a principle, The Passions of the Soul (1649) is the last work published by Descartes in life and can be considered as his philosophical testament. Written at the behest of Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia, who repeatedly asked her "instructor" for clarification on the relationship in human beings between two substances as different as soul and body, we find in it a series of reflections that deepen, specify or They rectify some of the theses that Descartes had previously supported. The work, elaborated with the intention of "explaining the passions -in the author's words- not as a speaker, nor as a moral philosopher, but only as a physicist", consists of three parts, "of which the first will deal with passions in general, and sometimes of the nature of the soul, etc .; the second, of the six primitive passions, and the third, of all the...read more