Sponsored
by
EUROPEAN SCIENCE FOUNDATION
The
Programme will address an important, but difficult question, namely,
which were the factors involved in transforming natural philosophy
into physics as we know it today? The Programme will focus its research
efforts on the period of the formation of European “natural
philosophy,” the cradle of modern scientific thought. The
cornerdates usually given for this period are 1200 and 1700. They
indicate roughly the introduction of Aristotle’s works into
the nascent universities, and the establishment of stable scientific
institutions such as the Royal Society or the Académie des
Sciences, whose activities were characterised by experimentation,
mathematical modelling, the publication of research results (in
vernacular scientific languages), and the publication and the sponsoring
of scientific collaboration. The year 1700 is a convenient date
to indicate the disappearance of a university-based, Latin-speaking,
essentially Aristotelian approach to nature.
Research activities of the Programme will be clustered in the following
four teams:
1. Mechanics, machines, and natural philosophy:
studies the medieval, Renaissance, and early modern developments
of mechanics, and pays special attention to key concepts such as
motion, space, matter, time, and force and their relation to natural
philosophy.
2. Mind and body: explores two entities and their
interactions, which nowadays have become an issue involving several
scientific disciplines, but which in pre-modern times belonged to
the single discipline of natural philosophy.
3. The anatomy of scientific knowledge: logic and method:
investigates the evolution of notions such as truth, certainty,
authority, and objectivity, the methodological requirements of (physical)
science, and the role of experience and experiment and of mathematical
discourse in different models of scientific explanation.
4. Contexts and contents of natural philosophy:
addresses the political, religious, sociological, and institutional
factors, in brief, the cultural context at large, which fostered
natural philosophy and helped to determine its physiognomy.
During the course of the Programme, each team will annually organise
one workshop. The total number of workshops will be sixteen. In
addition, the Programme will facilitate invited lectures and short-term
research visits by the participants of this Programme, and the sponsoring
of Ph.D. candidates to attend workshops. The Programme will be concluded
by a large conference, which aims at providing a synthesis of the
results obtained by the workshops organised over these four years.
At a previous meeting of the Steering Committee and the team leaders,
that was co-sponsored by the ESF, the following workshops have been
outlined (only the titles are provided here):
(More information: 'From Natural Philosophy to Science')
Team 1: Mechanics, machines and natural philosophy.
Teamleader: Sophie Roux
Conferences
2004: Mechanics and Natural Philosophy: Accommodation and Conflict (Tenerife)
2004:
Mechanics and Cosmology (Florence)
2005: The Mechanisation of Natural Philosophy (Grenoble )
2006: The Machine as Model and Metaphor (Berlín)
2006: Thought Experiments (Athens)
One of the central elements in the transformation of natural philosophy
into science is what Dijksterhuis has called “The Mechanization
of the World Picture”. Indeed, in the seventeenth century,
mechanics became the paradigmatic science par excellence.
Natural philosophy increasingly relied on mechanical explanatory
models, depicted both the microcosm and the macrocosm as machines,
and tried to imitate the science of mechanics by reducing all natural
phenomena to mathematically describable interactions between rigid
bodies. In the process, the science of mechanics, which had been
thriving particularly in the Hellenistic world and continued to
exist in a more subdued way in the Arabic and Latin Middle Ages,
developed in various new directions. The bases of medieval and Renaissance
mechanics were quickly enlarged and mathematised, while the medieval
image of the machina mundi was given completely new meanings.
This team will trace these developments, compare the medieval, Renaissance,
and especially the early modern developments of mechanics with one
another, and pay special attention to the key concepts of mechanics
and to their relation to natural philosophy (notably motion, space,
matter and force). The first conference (“The World of Pre-Classical
Mechanics”) will study the long-term relations between mechanics
and natural philosophy from Antiquity to the European Renaissance.
The second (“Mechanics and Cosmology”) will investigate
the relation between terrestrial mechanics and the emergence of
a new cosmology in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The
third conference (“Mechanical Conceptualisations”) will
consider the key concepts of the “mechanical” science,
comparing these to current concepts in medieval and Renaissance
Aristotelianism. The last conference (“The Machine as Model
and Metaphor”) will investigate all relevant aspects of machine
models in natural philosophy.
________________________________________________________________
Team 2 Mind and Body
Teamleader: Henrik Lagerlund
This team investigates the fascinating relationship between the scientia de anima and the scientia naturalis,
which until the seventeenth century had a common fate. The conferences
outlined below will examine, often for the first time, the various
efforts that were made in the period 1200-1700 to analyze cognition
in its relation with natural philosophy and science. The conferences
are systematically ordered according to several relationships that
can be discerned between the basic components in any account of
cognition, namely the knowing subject, the natural world, and its
representations. Given these components, one might speak of the
relation between the world and the subject, between the subject
and its representations, and between the representations and the
world. Each conference will focus on one specific relationship.
The first conference (“Theories of Perception”) will
deal with the question of how the natural world affects the perceiving
subject. The second conference (“Scepticism and the Mirror
of Nature”) will treat the question of how mental representations
may or may not correctly reflect the natural world. The third conference
(“The Mental Landscape”) deals with the subject’s
cognitive access to its mental representations. The fourth conference
will bring together the threads of the previous ones, addressing
the development and changing status of the science of the soul itself.
_________________________________________________________________
Team 3: The Anatomy of Scientific Thought: Logic and Method
Team leader: Frans de Haas
The series of four conferences envisaged for this team is aimed
at integrating philosophical and historical research of the development
of science from Antiquity, through the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
to the Early Modern Period. This integration requires that new areas
of research of periods and concepts which have been neglected in
the past be opened up. The first conference presents a general survey
of the main problems concerning the reception of Aristotle’s Posterior Analytics, the focal point of any discussion
on method and empirical inference from Antiquity to the Early Modern
Period. The results of this conference will lay the foundation for
the more particular questions to be dealt with in the remaining
conferences. The 2004 conference treats general questions concerning
the logic of inquiry, whereas the subsequent conferences look at
the concrete application of methods of inquiry and presentation
in two specific fields of science, namely biology, alchemy and medicine
on the one hand (2005), and mathematics (2006) on the other.
_________________________________________________________________
Team 4: Contexts and Contents of Natural Philosophy
Team leader: Sachiko Kusukawa
This team examines the relationship between the context and content
of natural philosophy 1200-1700. To what extent were the diffusion,
acceptance, development of theories, facts and methods affected
by the various ‘sites’ in which inquiries into nature
took place? How did publication, communication, instruments, technical
language and diagrams help establish disciplinary, professional
and community identities and their practices? How important were
medical, theological and institutional contexts in transforming
natural philosophy into ‘science’? The investigation
of such contexts, although indispensable for an understanding of
the development of natural philosophy into science, runs the risk
of opening up an infinite field of enquiry. The aim of each conference,
therefore, is to make the various contextual questions manageable
by focusing on core questions and attempting to answer them through
exemplary cases and comparative analyses.
Steering Committee
Johannes Thijssen (University of Nijmegen), Chairman
Joël Biard (University of Tours/Centre d’études
supérieures de la Renaissance)
Paolo Galluzzi (Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza/University
of Florence)
Simo Knuuttila (University of Helsinki)
Michael Langkjaer (University of Copenhagen)
Ian Maclean (All Souls College, Oxford)
Antoni Malet (Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona)
Jürgen Renn (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science)
Tatiana Sedova (Slovak Academy of Science, Bratislava)
Programme Coordinator: Cees Leijenhorst (University of Nijmegen)
MECHANICS
AND NATURAL PHILOSOPHY:
ACCOMMODATION AND CONFLICT
Workshop
in La Orotava, Tenerife. Canary Islands
January 30 - February 1, 2004.
ABSTRACT
In the thirteenth century, the few existing pieces of mechanical
knowledge were dispersed among distinct bodies of knowledge; by
the end of seventeenth century, mechanics, at this point defined
as the science of motion, was the physical science par excellence.
The workshop “Mechanics and Natural Philosophy: Accommodation
and Conflict” is devoted to the various and sometimes conflictual
traditions that have contributed to this long-term emergence of
the science of mechanics.
SCIENTIFIC
SUMMARY
One of the central elements of the transformation of natural philosophy
into science is what has been called the “mechanization of
the world picture”. This mechanization was preceded by a transformation
of mechanics: in the middle of the thirteenth century there was
nothing like a science of mechanics, not only because the word “mechanical”
was reserved to manual arts, but because the existing pieces of
knowledge concerning what we would now call “mechanics”
were dispersed among various bodies of knowledge; by the end of
seventeenth century, mechanics, at this point defined as the science
of motion, was the paradigmatic physical science. The workshop “Mechanics
and Natural Philosophy: Accommodation and Conflict” is devoted
to the various traditions that have contributed to the long-term
emergence of the science of mechanics. In order to identify these
traditions, to describe the material routes that they have followed
and to understand their relationships, we shall pay attention to
the following points:
1. The status of mechanics. Problems that are now referred to as
“mechanical” used to be distributed among a variety
of treatises, including logical or theological ones. Had these various
theoretical contexts any effect on the mechanical concepts formation?
For example, which effect did the insertion of the science of weights
into the Latin quadrivium have on its accommodation to the Aristotelian
natural philosophy? What were the consequences of the 16th century
claim that mechanics is, not an art, but a theoretical science?
2. Words and concepts. Certain words (eg., gravitas secundum situm,
impetus, momento) are often associated with a given physical theory,
as if the words contain the theory in a nutschell. On the one hand
however, concepts have histories of their own, which may be different
from histories of words; on the other hand, one word can have various
meanings in various contexts. Had translations from the Greek and
Latin to the vernacular languages, or from one language to the other,
any effect on the concepts transformations? What does explains the
longevity of some words? How does the meaning of a concept change
when the theoretical context changes?
3. Use of mathematics. Until the invention of the infinitesimal
calculus, the Euclid’s theory of proportions had been the
main tool for the analysis of motion as well as for the science
of weights. Was it the only mathematical theory used in mechanics?
Could it be applied to all mechanical problems without modification?
Why were mathematical proofs sought after? What was considered as
a sound mathematical proof? If mechanics is partly physical and
partly mathematical, how is the transition from physics to mechanics
assured?
4. Models and principles. Classical mechanics is founded on a limited
number of concrete models (a lever, an inclined plane, a thrown
ball, a sling, a pendulum, etc.). But the expression “concrete
models” tends to hide the problem. “Concrete models”
refer to basic sense experiences, but they are figures in books
as well, and they are linked to general physical principles. How
does a basic sense experience become a model? What are the respective
roles of text and figure in the transmission of a model? When does
a concrete model become a physical principle? What happens if several
models compete in the explanation of a new experience?
MEETING
PROGRAMME
| FRIDAY,
01.30.04 |
|
| |
|
9.30-9.45
|
Welcome
and opening address |
| 9.45-10.40 |
Jürgen
Sarnowski
Talk: “The Theory of Impetus: Origins, Development, Consequences” |
| 10.40-11.35
|
Jean
Celeyrette
Talk: “The Emergence of Bradwardine’s Law” |
| 11.35-12.05
|
Coffee |
| 12.05-13.00
|
Christiane
Vilain
Talk: “The Comparison between Curved and Straight Motions
in the Aristotelian Tradition of the Renaissance” |
| 13.00-14.00 |
General
discussion |
| 14.00-15.20 |
Lunch |
| 15.30-16.15
|
Victor
Navarro-Brotons
Discussion of sources: “Mechanics and natural philosophy
in sixteenth century Spain: some preliminary notes and questions" |
| 16.15-17.45 |
Peter
Damerow and Brian Fuchs
Discussion of sources: “Mechanics without theory” |
| |
Peter
Damerow, Brian Fuchs, Jürgen Renn and Peter McLaughlin
Discussion of sources: “The emergence of theoretical mechanics” |
| |
|
| SATURDAY,
01.31.04 |
|
| |
|
| 9.00-9.55
|
W.
Roy Laird
Talk: “The Nature of Mechanics and the Mechanics of Nature
in the Sixteenth Century” |
| 9.55-10.40
|
Romano
Gatto
Talk: “An original Archimedean mechanical work: Stigliola’s
De Gli Elementi Mechanici” |
| 10.40-11.20
|
Coffee |
| 11.20-12.15 |
Mario Helbing
Talk: “Natural Philosophy and Mechanics at the Faculty
of Arts in Pisa from 1580 to 1592” |
| 12.15-13.10
|
Pier
Daniele Napolitani
Talk: “The Archimedean Tradition and the Transition from
Natural Philosophy to Science” |
| 13.10-14.00
|
General
discussion |
| 14.00-15.20
|
Lunch |
15.30-17.00
|
Jürgen
Renn and Jochen Büttner
Discussion of sources: “The representation of mechanical
knowledge by deductive theories” |
| |
Mohamed
Abattouy and Jürgen Renn
Discussion of sources: “The Arabic transmission and transformation” |
| |
Jochen
Büttner, Jürgen Renn, Peter Damerow and Peter McLaughlin
Discussion of sources: “The challenge of the mechanics
tradition in early modern times” |
| |
|
| SUNDAY,
02.01.04 |
|
| |
|
| 9.00-9.55
|
Geert
Van Paemel
Talk: “Jesuit views on the science of mechanics” |
| 9.55-10.40
|
Antoni
Malet
Talk: “Between mathematics and experiments: Late 17th-century
hydrostatics and pneumatics” |
| 10.40-11.00
|
General
discussion |
| 11.00
|
Departure
to the Teide |
| 14.00-16.00
|
Lunch
at the Parador of the Teide |
| 16.00-17.00
|
Final
discussion |
| |
|
| LOCAL
ORGANIZER |
Fundación
Canaria Orotava de Historia de la Ciencia
Director: José Montesinos Sirera
C/. Calvario 17, 38300 La Orotava. Tenerife – España
Tl.: (+34) 922 322 862
Fax: (+34) 922 334 475
e-mail: fundacion@fundacionorotava.org |