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Kant's Justification of Newtonian Science

<p>The project is a study of Kant's justification of Newtonian science. It shows how Kant's justification of Newtonian science is a justification not of the fundamental principles of Newton's Principia, but rather of Newtonian science, that is, how Newton's Principia was received in 18th century Germany. Given the rich array of ways in which various figures attempted to come to terms with Newtonian science, the project illustrates how Kant's attempt at justifying Newtonian science most closely resemble projects by those with significant interests in metaphysics (e.g., Leibnizians such as Wolff, Knutzen, Gottsched). Kant sees the need to develop non-empirical justifications of Newtonian principles and to articulate an ontology that is compatible with Newtonian physics (given his rejection of Newtonian absolute space and time). The results of this project should benefit anyone interested in the history of philosophy of science, the history of science, and the history of philosophy, and, in general, to those interested in understanding the complex relations among natural science and philosophy.</p>

Contact Info

Principal Investigator

Watkins, Eric

PI Email

ewatkins@ucsd.edu

Program Manager

Ronald Rainger

Organization

University of California-San Diego

Organization Address

Office of Contract & Grant Admin

City

La Jolla

State

CA

Zip

92093

Phone

8585344896

Information

Award Number

80360

Award Amount to Date

80072

NSF Directorate

SBE

NSF Organization

SES

Award Instrument

Continuing grant

Programs
  • Hist & Philosophy of SET
Program Element Codes
  • 1353
Program Reference Codes
  • OTHR
  • 0000
Field of Applications
  • 0000099 Other Applications NEC
Start Date

2002-03-01T00:00:00Z

Last Amendment Date

2003-04-22T00:00:00Z

Expiration Date

2005-02-28T00:00:00Z