牛顿的形而上学埃里克-施利瑟的论文(评论)

IF 0.7 1区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY
Marius Stan
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In the 1960s, the tide would turn, as Howard Stein and James Edward McGuire separately began to show that Newton's metaphysics was not just sophisticated, but often more compelling than its early modern alternatives (see respectively \"Newtonian Spacetime,\" <em>Texas Quarterly</em> 10 [1967]: 174–200; and <em>Tradition and Innovation: Newton's Metaphysics of Nature</em> [Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995]). Eric Schliesser's book unfolds in that same register of appreciative, high scholarship, and it attests to the enduring attraction of its subject.</p> <p>The book grew out of previous discrete papers, to which he added a few more for this occasion. Accordingly, it does not come with a master argument. Rather, it is an in-depth exploration of some key metaphysical themes in Newton. As such, it befits its subject figure, who reflected on themes and concepts while stopping short of working out systems.</p> <p>The first major theme is Newton and Spinozism. The latter does not denote Spinoza's metaphysics. In fact, Schliesser explains, Newton shared with Spinoza some weighty commitments, for example, to space being actually infinite, and to substance monism: \"for Newton, there is strictly speaking only one genuine substance,\" namely, God (33). Rather, \"Spinozism\" is an interpreter's category for a bundle of three theses: identifying God and nature; denying final causation in the physical world; and the assumption of \"blind\" metaphysical necessity. Some counted Hobbes and John Toland as Spinozist in this sense, and even Epicurus, <em>avant la lettre</em>. Newton and his followers argued vehemently against this package, as Schliesser shows in chapters 4, 5, and 8. Their chief complaint was that Spinozism is unable to account for the \"origin of motion,\" for a certain type of order, and for the stability of cosmological structure—and to do so in a way that \"meets the standards of Newtonian mechanics\" (122). This interpretive lens allows Schliesser to draw Kant in, by reading his youthful <em>Theory of Heaven</em> as a possible Spinozist reply to their objections (chapter 3). <strong>[End Page 157]</strong></p> <p>A second theme is the metaphysics of mechanics, where Schliesser weaves together several strands. One is the ontology of gravity, for which he offers a novel construal: for Newton, gravity counts as real, but in a qualified sense. Namely, it is not essential and not intrinsic: \"even after creation, a lonely partless particle of matter in the universe would not be said to gravitate.\" And gravity is relational: a \"shared quality\" of two or more bits of matter, which obtains in virtue of their sharing a nature (19). Another strand is Newton's ontology of time—really, a subtle, difficult topic long neglected. Famously, Newton in <em>Principia</em> defends absolute, true, and mathematical time. The question is what these three qualifiers denote, and whether Newton thought they were synonymous. Schliesser in chapter 7 argues for the provocative view that \"absolute\" and \"true\" time are not identical concepts; rather, they pick out different entities. These entities share a common structure, namely, metric and topological. That makes them species of \"mathematical\" time (179). But, Schliesser contends, Newton has unequal warrant for his two concepts of time.</p> <p>Yet another theme is formal causation. It comes to the fore in chapter 5, which grapples with Newton's opaque idea that space is an \"emanative effect.\" Schliesser explains that here, \"emanation picks out a species of formal causation\" (147), but in a novel, early modern sense that comes from Bacon, not Aristotle. If space has a formal cause, then so has its twin brother, time, the topic of chapter 7. God is their common formal cause. 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Hardback, $99.90. <p>Newton owes his high regard to the quantitative science he left us, but his overall picture of the world had some robustly metaphysical threads woven in as well. Posthumous judgment about the value of these threads has varied wildly. Christian Wolff thought him a metaphysical rustic, as did Hans Reichenbach some two centuries later (\\\"Die Bewegungslehre bei Newton, Leibniz und Huygens,\\\" <em>Kant-Studien</em> 29 [1924]: 416–38). In the 1960s, the tide would turn, as Howard Stein and James Edward McGuire separately began to show that Newton's metaphysics was not just sophisticated, but often more compelling than its early modern alternatives (see respectively \\\"Newtonian Spacetime,\\\" <em>Texas Quarterly</em> 10 [1967]: 174–200; and <em>Tradition and Innovation: Newton's Metaphysics of Nature</em> [Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995]). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 牛顿的形而上学:埃里克-施利瑟的论文 马里乌斯-斯坦 埃里克-施利瑟。牛顿的形而上学:Essays.牛津:牛津大学出版社,2021 年。Pp.328.精装本,99.90 美元。牛顿留给我们的定量科学是对他的高度评价,但他对世界的整体描绘中也交织着一些强有力的形而上学线索。后人对这些主线价值的评判大相径庭。克里斯蒂安-沃尔夫(Christian Wolff)认为他是一个形而上学的乡巴佬,大约两个世纪后,汉斯-莱辛巴赫(Hans Reichenbach)也这么认为("Die Bewegungslehre bei Newton, Leibniz und Huygens," Kant-Studien 29 [1924]:416-38).20 世纪 60 年代,随着霍华德-斯坦因(Howard Stein)和詹姆斯-爱德华-麦奎尔(James Edward McGuire)分别开始证明牛顿的形而上学不仅复杂,而且往往比其早期的现代替代品更有说服力(分别见《牛顿时空》,《德克萨斯季刊》10 [1967]:174-200; and Tradition and Innovation:牛顿的自然形而上学》[Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995])。埃里克-施利瑟的这本书也是以这种欣赏性的高水平学术研究为背景展开的,它证明了其主题的持久吸引力。这本书是在以前的分散论文的基础上发展起来的,他在此基础上又增加了几篇论文。因此,这本书并没有一个主论点。相反,它是对牛顿的一些关键形而上学主题的深入探讨。因此,这也符合它的主题人物,他对主题和概念进行了反思,但并没有形成体系。第一个主题是牛顿与斯宾诺莎主义。后者并不表示斯宾诺莎的形而上学。事实上,Schliesser 解释说,牛顿与斯宾诺莎共享一些重要的承诺,例如空间实际上是无限的,以及物质一元论:"对牛顿来说,严格地说,真正的物质只有一个,即上帝"(33)。相反,"斯宾诺莎主义 "是一个解释者的范畴,它包含三个论点:上帝与自然;否认物理世界的最终因果关系;以及 "盲目的 "形而上学必然性假设。有些人认为霍布斯和约翰-托兰是这种意义上的斯宾诺莎主义者,甚至伊壁鸠鲁也是。正如 Schliesser 在第 4、5 和 8 章中指出的那样,牛顿及其追随者强烈反对这套理论。他们的主要抱怨是,斯宾诺莎主义无法解释 "运动的起源"、某种类型的秩序以及宇宙结构的稳定性,而且无法以 "符合牛顿力学标准 "的方式做到这一点(122)。这种解释学视角让施莱瑟能够把康德拉进来,把他年轻时的《天国论》解读为斯宾诺莎主义者对他们反对意见的可能回应(第 3 章)。[第 157 页尾)第二个主题是力学的形而上学,施莱瑟在这里将几条线索交织在一起。其一是万有引力的本体论,他对此提出了一种新颖的解释:对牛顿来说,万有引力是真实的,但只是在限定的意义上。也就是说,它不是本质的,也不是内在的:"即使在创世之后,宇宙中孤独的无部分物质粒子也不会被说成是有引力的"。万有引力是关系性的:两个或多个比特物质的 "共同品质",由于它们具有共同的性质而获得(19)。另一个方面是牛顿的时间本体论--实际上,这是一个长期被忽视的微妙而困难的话题。著名的是,牛顿在《原理》中为绝对时间、真实时间和数学时间辩护。问题在于这三个限定词的含义,以及牛顿是否认为它们是同义词。Schliesser 在第 7 章中提出了一个具有启发性的观点,即 "绝对 "时间和 "真实 "时间并不是完全相同的概念;相反,它们挑选的是不同的实体。这些实体具有共同的结构,即度量和拓扑结构。这使它们成为 "数学 "时间的种类(179)。但是,Schliesser 认为,牛顿的两个时间概念并没有得到同等的证明。另一个主题是形式因果关系。它在第 5 章中凸显出来,该章探讨了牛顿关于空间是一种 "发射效应 "的不明确观点。施莱瑟解释说,在这里,"发散挑出了形式因果关系的一个种类"(147),但这是一种新颖的、早期现代意义上的形式因果关系,它来自培根,而非亚里士多德。如果空间有一个形式因果,那么它的孪生兄弟时间也有一个形式因果,这就是第 7 章的主题。上帝是它们共同的形式原因。然后在第 6 章(与 Zvi Biener 合著)中,Schliesser 补充说,对牛顿来说,定律...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Newton's Metaphysics: Essays by Eric Schliesser (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Newton's Metaphysics: Essays by Eric Schliesser
  • Marius Stan
Eric Schliesser. Newton's Metaphysics: Essays. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. Pp. 328. Hardback, $99.90.

Newton owes his high regard to the quantitative science he left us, but his overall picture of the world had some robustly metaphysical threads woven in as well. Posthumous judgment about the value of these threads has varied wildly. Christian Wolff thought him a metaphysical rustic, as did Hans Reichenbach some two centuries later ("Die Bewegungslehre bei Newton, Leibniz und Huygens," Kant-Studien 29 [1924]: 416–38). In the 1960s, the tide would turn, as Howard Stein and James Edward McGuire separately began to show that Newton's metaphysics was not just sophisticated, but often more compelling than its early modern alternatives (see respectively "Newtonian Spacetime," Texas Quarterly 10 [1967]: 174–200; and Tradition and Innovation: Newton's Metaphysics of Nature [Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995]). Eric Schliesser's book unfolds in that same register of appreciative, high scholarship, and it attests to the enduring attraction of its subject.

The book grew out of previous discrete papers, to which he added a few more for this occasion. Accordingly, it does not come with a master argument. Rather, it is an in-depth exploration of some key metaphysical themes in Newton. As such, it befits its subject figure, who reflected on themes and concepts while stopping short of working out systems.

The first major theme is Newton and Spinozism. The latter does not denote Spinoza's metaphysics. In fact, Schliesser explains, Newton shared with Spinoza some weighty commitments, for example, to space being actually infinite, and to substance monism: "for Newton, there is strictly speaking only one genuine substance," namely, God (33). Rather, "Spinozism" is an interpreter's category for a bundle of three theses: identifying God and nature; denying final causation in the physical world; and the assumption of "blind" metaphysical necessity. Some counted Hobbes and John Toland as Spinozist in this sense, and even Epicurus, avant la lettre. Newton and his followers argued vehemently against this package, as Schliesser shows in chapters 4, 5, and 8. Their chief complaint was that Spinozism is unable to account for the "origin of motion," for a certain type of order, and for the stability of cosmological structure—and to do so in a way that "meets the standards of Newtonian mechanics" (122). This interpretive lens allows Schliesser to draw Kant in, by reading his youthful Theory of Heaven as a possible Spinozist reply to their objections (chapter 3). [End Page 157]

A second theme is the metaphysics of mechanics, where Schliesser weaves together several strands. One is the ontology of gravity, for which he offers a novel construal: for Newton, gravity counts as real, but in a qualified sense. Namely, it is not essential and not intrinsic: "even after creation, a lonely partless particle of matter in the universe would not be said to gravitate." And gravity is relational: a "shared quality" of two or more bits of matter, which obtains in virtue of their sharing a nature (19). Another strand is Newton's ontology of time—really, a subtle, difficult topic long neglected. Famously, Newton in Principia defends absolute, true, and mathematical time. The question is what these three qualifiers denote, and whether Newton thought they were synonymous. Schliesser in chapter 7 argues for the provocative view that "absolute" and "true" time are not identical concepts; rather, they pick out different entities. These entities share a common structure, namely, metric and topological. That makes them species of "mathematical" time (179). But, Schliesser contends, Newton has unequal warrant for his two concepts of time.

Yet another theme is formal causation. It comes to the fore in chapter 5, which grapples with Newton's opaque idea that space is an "emanative effect." Schliesser explains that here, "emanation picks out a species of formal causation" (147), but in a novel, early modern sense that comes from Bacon, not Aristotle. If space has a formal cause, then so has its twin brother, time, the topic of chapter 7. God is their common formal cause. Then in chapter 6 (coauthored with Zvi Biener) Schliesser adds that, for Newton, laws...

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