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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Newtonian and Non-Newtonian Elements in Hume

Matias Slavov

subject

Cultural StudiesHistoryNatural philosophyNewton Isaac050905 science studies0603 philosophy ethics and religionNewtonianismPrinciple of sufficient reasonNewtonianismta611NewtonPhilosophyInterpretation (philosophy)05 social sciences06 humanities and the artsEpistemologyPhilosophyScholarshipDavid060302 philosophyIsaacIntelligibility (philosophy)Hume0509 other social sciencesExperimentalismHume David

description

For the last forty years, Hume's Newtonianism has been a debated topic in Hume scholarship. The crux of the matter can be formulated by the following question: Is Hume a Newtonian philosopher? Debates concerning this question have produced two lines of interpretation. I shall call them ‘traditional’ and ‘critical’ interpretations. The traditional interpretation asserts that there are many Newtonian elements in Hume, whereas the critical interpretation seriously questions this.In this article, I consider the main points made by both lines of interpretations and offer further arguments that contribute to this debate. I shall first argue, in favor of the traditional interpretation, that Hume is sympathetic to many prominently Newtonian themes in natural philosophy such as experimentalism, criticality of hypotheses, inductive proof, and criticality of Leibnizian principles of sufficient reason and intelligibility. Second, I shall argue, in accordance with the critical interpretation, that in many cases Hume is not a Newtonian philosopher: His conceptions regarding space and time, vacuum, reality of forces, specifics about causation, and the status of mechanism differ markedly from Newton's related conceptions. The outcome of the article is that there are both Newtonian and non/anti-Newtonian elements in Hume.

10.3366/jsp.2016.0143http://juuli.fi/Record/0278661416