Physics in Minerva’s Academy: Early to Mid-Eighteenth-Century Appropriations of Isaac Newton’s Natural Philosophy at the University of Leiden and in the Dutch Republic at Large, 1687–c.1750: Scientific and Learned Cultures and Their Institutions, cartea 37
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004716155
ISBN-10: 9004716157
Pagini: 518
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Scientific and Learned Cultures and Their Institutions
ISBN-10: 9004716157
Pagini: 518
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Scientific and Learned Cultures and Their Institutions
Cuprins
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
1 Isaac Newton and the University of Leiden
1 ‘L’amour de la vérité m’avait conduit à Leyde’: the Academia Lugduno-Batava and Its Role in the Diffusion of Isaac Newton’s Natural Philosophy
2 The Religious Uses of Newton’s Natural Philosophy
3 Early-to-Mid-Eighteenth-Century Dutch Interest in Newton’s Natural Philosophy: a Fresh Look
4 Overview and Structure
2 Adriaen Verwer and the First Edition of Isaac Newton’s Principia in the Dutch Republic
1 Preamble: One of Newton’s ‘Most Valiant Soldiers’
2 A doopsgezind Merchant in Amsterdam
3 ‘Chaining the Hellhound’
4 Entering the Republic of Letters
5 Verwer as a Reader of the First Edition of the Principia
6 The Foundations of Christian Faith and Natural Reason
7 Conclusion
3 Using One’s Talents to Honour God: Lambert ten Kate and Newton’s Natural Philosophy
1 Lambert ten Kate: a Versatile Amsterdam Doopsgezinde
2 Worldly Vanities and Christian Virtues
3 The Impact of the Second Edition of the Principia
4 Improving on Newton’s Musical Division of the Spectrum and Fortifying the Proof of God’s Being and Governing with ‘More Than a Hundred Pillars’
5 Conclusion
4 Countering the ‘Pernicious Pride to Know Everything:’ Bernard Nieuwentijt on Newton as a Mixed Mathematician
1 Curing pansophia through ‘Learned Ignorance’
2 Medicine, Mathematics and Experimental Philosophy: 1675–96
3 Het regt gebruik der werelt beschouwingen (1715): Nieuwentijt’s Physico-Theological and Biblical Attacks on Spinoza
4 The Appropriation of Newton’s Principia in Het regt gebruik der werelt beschouwingen
5 Gronden der zekerheid (1720): Nieuwentijt’s Epistemological-Methodological Attack on Spinoza
6 Newton as a Mixed Mathematician
7 Conclusion
5 Herman Boerhaave, the Introduction of Newton’s Natural Philosophy at the University of Leiden, and the Unshackling ‘the Bondage of Sectarianism’
1 Introduction
2 Descartes’s Philosophy at the University of Leiden
3 Burchard de Volder and the Theatrum physicum
4 Wolferd Senguerd’s Anglophilia
5 The Education of the ‘communis Europæ sub initia hujus seculi Præceptor’
6 Medicine, Method, and Boerhaave’s ‘Mathematicorum via’, 1701–1708
7 The Introduction of Newton’s Work in Leiden: Boerhaave’s 1710–1711 ‘Praelectiones de methodo addiscendae medicinae’
8 Boerhaave’s 1715 Rectoral Address
9 Conclusion
6 Willem Jacob ’s Gravesande, physica, and ‘NEWTONI vestigiis insistere’
1 Introduction
2 From ’s-Hertogenbosch to Leiden, 1688–1707
3 The Hague, Mathematics, the 1715–1716 Diplomatic Trip to England, and ‘loix particulières’
4 ‘[V]ous faire voir l’estime que j’ai pour vous’: Defending Newton in the Journal litéraire de la Haye, 1713–c.1717
5 Newton, ‘veræ Philosophiæ Instaurator’, and Moral Certainty: 1717 and Beyond
6 Epistemological and Methodological Considerations in the Preface to the First Edition of Physices elementa mathematica: 1719 and Beyond
7 ’s Gravesande’s Magnum Opus: a Bird’s-Eye View
8 Machinae and Experiments Galore
9 Conclusion
7 ‘Nullius partes sequor:’ Pieter van Musschenbroek and the Provisionalism and Fallibilism of Natural Philosophy
1 Van Musschenbroek, ‘the Greatest Natural Scientists of Our Time’
2 The Contours of Van Musschenbroek’s Life and Career
3 Newton in Van Musschenbroek’s Orations and Writings for Students and Compatriots, 1723–1741: Nihil novi sub sole
4 Beyond 1741: The Plot Thickens
5 ‘The Doctrine of Firmness Will Always Escape the Sagacity of Mathematicians:’ Van Musschenbroek on Cohesion
6 Conclusion
8 Conclusion
Bibliography
General Index
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
1 Isaac Newton and the University of Leiden
1 ‘L’amour de la vérité m’avait conduit à Leyde’: the Academia Lugduno-Batava and Its Role in the Diffusion of Isaac Newton’s Natural Philosophy
2 The Religious Uses of Newton’s Natural Philosophy
3 Early-to-Mid-Eighteenth-Century Dutch Interest in Newton’s Natural Philosophy: a Fresh Look
4 Overview and Structure
Part 1: The Diffusion of Isaac Newton’s Natural Philosophy in and around Amsterdam, c.1687–1720
2 Adriaen Verwer and the First Edition of Isaac Newton’s Principia in the Dutch Republic
1 Preamble: One of Newton’s ‘Most Valiant Soldiers’
2 A doopsgezind Merchant in Amsterdam
3 ‘Chaining the Hellhound’
4 Entering the Republic of Letters
5 Verwer as a Reader of the First Edition of the Principia
6 The Foundations of Christian Faith and Natural Reason
7 Conclusion
3 Using One’s Talents to Honour God: Lambert ten Kate and Newton’s Natural Philosophy
1 Lambert ten Kate: a Versatile Amsterdam Doopsgezinde
2 Worldly Vanities and Christian Virtues
3 The Impact of the Second Edition of the Principia
4 Improving on Newton’s Musical Division of the Spectrum and Fortifying the Proof of God’s Being and Governing with ‘More Than a Hundred Pillars’
5 Conclusion
4 Countering the ‘Pernicious Pride to Know Everything:’ Bernard Nieuwentijt on Newton as a Mixed Mathematician
1 Curing pansophia through ‘Learned Ignorance’
2 Medicine, Mathematics and Experimental Philosophy: 1675–96
3 Het regt gebruik der werelt beschouwingen (1715): Nieuwentijt’s Physico-Theological and Biblical Attacks on Spinoza
4 The Appropriation of Newton’s Principia in Het regt gebruik der werelt beschouwingen
5 Gronden der zekerheid (1720): Nieuwentijt’s Epistemological-Methodological Attack on Spinoza
6 Newton as a Mixed Mathematician
7 Conclusion
Part 2: The Blossoming of Newton’s Natural Philosophy at the University of Leiden, c.1710–1762
5 Herman Boerhaave, the Introduction of Newton’s Natural Philosophy at the University of Leiden, and the Unshackling ‘the Bondage of Sectarianism’
1 Introduction
2 Descartes’s Philosophy at the University of Leiden
3 Burchard de Volder and the Theatrum physicum
4 Wolferd Senguerd’s Anglophilia
5 The Education of the ‘communis Europæ sub initia hujus seculi Præceptor’
6 Medicine, Method, and Boerhaave’s ‘Mathematicorum via’, 1701–1708
7 The Introduction of Newton’s Work in Leiden: Boerhaave’s 1710–1711 ‘Praelectiones de methodo addiscendae medicinae’
8 Boerhaave’s 1715 Rectoral Address
9 Conclusion
6 Willem Jacob ’s Gravesande, physica, and ‘NEWTONI vestigiis insistere’
1 Introduction
2 From ’s-Hertogenbosch to Leiden, 1688–1707
3 The Hague, Mathematics, the 1715–1716 Diplomatic Trip to England, and ‘loix particulières’
4 ‘[V]ous faire voir l’estime que j’ai pour vous’: Defending Newton in the Journal litéraire de la Haye, 1713–c.1717
5 Newton, ‘veræ Philosophiæ Instaurator’, and Moral Certainty: 1717 and Beyond
6 Epistemological and Methodological Considerations in the Preface to the First Edition of Physices elementa mathematica: 1719 and Beyond
7 ’s Gravesande’s Magnum Opus: a Bird’s-Eye View
8 Machinae and Experiments Galore
9 Conclusion
7 ‘Nullius partes sequor:’ Pieter van Musschenbroek and the Provisionalism and Fallibilism of Natural Philosophy
1 Van Musschenbroek, ‘the Greatest Natural Scientists of Our Time’
2 The Contours of Van Musschenbroek’s Life and Career
3 Newton in Van Musschenbroek’s Orations and Writings for Students and Compatriots, 1723–1741: Nihil novi sub sole
4 Beyond 1741: The Plot Thickens
5 ‘The Doctrine of Firmness Will Always Escape the Sagacity of Mathematicians:’ Van Musschenbroek on Cohesion
6 Conclusion
8 Conclusion
Bibliography
General Index