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Title Interpreting Newton : critical essays / edited by Andrew Janiak and Eric Schliesser
Published Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2012

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Description 1 online resource (ix, 439 pages)
Series Cambridge books online
Contents Introduction / Andrew Janiak and Eric Schliesser -- Newton's law-constitutive approach to bodies: a response to Descartes / Katherine Brading -- Leibniz, Newton and force / Daniel Garber -- Locke's qualified embrace of Newton's Principia / Mary Domski -- What geometry postulates: Newton and Barrow on the relationship of mathematics to nature / Katherine Dunlop -- Cotes' queries: Newton's empiricism and conceptions of matter / Zvi Biener and Chris Smeenk -- Newton's scientific method and the universal law of gravitation / Ori Belkind -- Newton, Huygens and Euler: empirical support for laws of motion / William Harper -- What did Newton mean by 'Absolute Motion'? / Nick Huggett -- From velocities to fluxions / Marco Panza -- Newton, Locke, and Hume / Graciela de Pierris -- Maupertuis on attraction as an inherent property of matter / Lisa Downing -- The Newtonian refutation of Spinoza: Newton's challenge and the Socratic problem / Eric Schliesser -- Dispositional explanations: Boyle's problem, Newton's solution, Hume's response / Lynn S. Joy -- Newton and Kant on absolute space: from theology to transcendental philosophy / Michael Friedman -- How Newton's Principia changed physics / George E. Smith
Summary "This collection of specially commissioned essays by leading scholars presents new research on Isaac Newton and his main philosophical interlocutors and critics. The essays analyze Newton's relation to his contemporaries, especially Barrow, Descartes, Leibniz, and Locke, and discuss the ways in which a broad range of figures, including Hume, MacLaurin, Maupertuis, and Kant, reacted to his thought. The wide range of topics discussed includes the laws of nature, the notion of force, the relation of mathematics to nature, Newton's argument for universal gravitation, his attitude toward philosophical empiricism, his use of "fluxions," his approach toward measurement problems, and his concept of absolute motion, together with new interpretations of Newton's matter theory. The volume concludes with an extended essay that analyzes the changes in physics wrought by Newton's Principia. A substantial introduction and bibliography provide essential reference guides"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727 -- Philosophy
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727
Philosophy of nature -- History -- 17th century
Philosophy of nature -- History -- 18th century
PHILOSOPHY -- History & Surveys -- Modern.
Philosophy
Philosophy of nature
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Janiak, Andrew, editor
Schliesser, Eric, 1971- editor.
ISBN 9781139161176
1139161172
9781139159128
1139159127
9780511994845
0511994842
1139157361
9781139157360