1st Edition

Vanishing Matter and the Laws of Motion Descartes and Beyond

Edited By Peter Anstey, Dana Jalobeanu Copyright 2011
    286 Pages 27 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    286 Pages 27 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This volume explores the themes of vanishing matter, matter and the laws of nature, the qualities of matter, and the diversity of the debates about matter in the early modern period. Chapters are unified by a number of interlocking themes which together enable some of the broader contours of the philosophy of matter to be charted in new ways. Part I concerns Cartesian Matter; Part II covers Matter, Mechanism and Medicine; Part III covers Matter and the Laws of Motion; and Part IV covers Leibniz and Hume. Bringing together some of the world’s leading scholars of early modern philosophy, as well as some exciting new researchers, Vanishing Matter and the Laws of Motion stakes out new territory that all serious scholars of early modern philosophy and science will want to traverse.

    Introduction I. Cartesian Matter  1. The Vanishing Nature of Body in Descartes' Natural Philosophy  Mihnea Dobre  2. The New Matter Theory and Its Epistemology: Descartes (and late Scholastics) on Hypotheses and Moral Certainty  Roger Ariew  II. Matter, Mechanism, and Medicine  3. Post-Cartesian Atomism: The Case of Francois Bernier  Vlad Alexandrescu  4. The Matter of Medicine: New Medical Matter Theories in Mid-Seventeenth-Century England  Peter Anstey  5. Without God: Gravity as a Relational Quality of Matter in Newton's Treatise  Eric Schliesser  III. Matter and the Laws of Motion   6. The Cartesians of the Royal Society: The Debate Over the Nature of collisions (1668-1671)  Dana Jalobeanu  7. On Composite Systems: Descartes, Newton, and the Law-Constitutive Approach  Katherine Brading  8. Huygens, Wren, Wallis, and Newton on Rules of Impact and Reflection  Jemma Murray, William Harper, and Curtis Wilson  IV. Leibniz and Hume 9. Leibniz, Body and Monads  Daniel Garber   10. Leibniz on Void and Matter Sorin Costreie  11. Hume on the Distinction Between Primary and Secondary Qualities  Jani Hakkarainen

    Biography

    Dana Jalobeanu is Lecturer in Philosophy and program director at the research center Foundations of Early Modernity at the University of Bucharest. Her current research focuses on the emergence of early modern experimental philosophy, with a special interest in the writings of Francis Bacon and their reception. She is the author of The Invention of Modernity: Natural Philosophy and Theology in the Seventeenth Century (in Romanian), Cluj: Napoca Star, 2006.

    Peter R. Anstey is the inaugural Professor of Early Modern Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Otago. His research focuses on early modern philosophy with special reference to the writings of John Locke and Robert Boyle. He is the author of The Philosophy of Robert Boyle, London: Routledge, 2000.