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Philosophical Mechanics in the Age of Reason
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Philosophical Mechanics in the Age of Reason
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From pebbles to planets, tigers to tables, pine trees to people;
animate and inanimate, natural and artificial; bodies are
everywhere. Bodies populate the world, acting and interacting with
one another, and they are the subject-matter of Newton's laws of
motion. But what is a body? And how can we know how they behave? In
Philosophical Mechanics in the Age of Reason, Katherine Brading and
Marius Stan examine the struggle for a theory of bodies. At the
beginning of the 18th century, physics was the branch of philosophy
that studied bodies in general. Its primary task was to provide a
qualitative account of the nature of bodies, including their
essential properties, causal powers, and generic behaviors. Pursued
by a variety of figures both canonical (from Leibniz to Kant) and
less familiar (from Du Châtelet and Euler to d'Alembert and
Lagrange), this proved a difficult task. At stake were the
appropriate epistemologies and methods for theorizing about the
natural world. Solutions demanded the combined resources of
philosophy, physics, and mechanics: what Brading and Stan call a
“philosophical mechanics.” Brading and Stan analyze a century
of widespread, concerted efforts to solve “the problem of
bodies,” they examine the consequences of the many failures, both
for the problem itself and for philosophy more generally. They
reveal relationships among disparate themes of 18th century physics
and philosophy, from the nature of matter to the motion of a
vibrating string; causation to the principle of least action; and
the role of subtle matter in collision theory to analytic
mechanics. All of these, Brading and Stan argue, are related to the
eventual emergence of physics as an independent discipline,
autonomous from philosophy, more than a century after Newton's
Principia. This book provides a new framing of natural philosophy
and its transformations in the Enlightenment; and it proposes an
account of how physics and philosophy evolved into distinct fields
of inquiry.
General
Imprint: |
Oxford UniversityPress
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
August 2023 |
Authors: |
Katherine Brading
(Professor of Philosophy)
• Marius Stan
(Associate Professor of Philosophy)
|
Dimensions: |
235 x 156mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
400 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-19-767895-4 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
0-19-767895-5 |
Barcode: |
9780197678954 |
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