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The third force in seventeenth-century thought

New York: E.J. Brill (1992)

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  1. On Defining a Jewish Stance toward Newtonianism: Eliakim ben Abraham Hart's Wars of the Lord.David Ruderman - 1997 - Science in Context 10 (4):677-691.
    The ArgumentThe article studies a small Hebrew book called “The Wars of God” composed by an Anglo-Jewish jeweler who lived in London at the end of the eighteenth century. The book is interesting in further documenting the Jewish response to Newtonianism, that amalgam of scientific, political, and religious ideas that pervaded the culture of England and the Continent throughout the century. Hart, while presenting Newton in a favorable light, departs from other Jewish Newtonians in voicing certain reservations about Newton's alleged (...)
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  • Prophecy and scepticism in the sixteenth and seventeenth century.Richard H. Popkin - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 4 (1):1 – 20.
  • A ciência nas utopias de Campanella, Bacon, Comenius, e Glanvill.Bernardo Jefferson Oliveirdea - 2002 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 43 (106):42-59.
  • From Cudworth to Hume: Cambridge Platonism and the Scottish Enlightenment.Sarah Hutton - 2012 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 42 (S1):8-26.
    This paper argues that the Cambridge Platonists had stronger philosophical links to Scottish moral philosophy than the received history allows. Building on the work of Michael Gill who has demonstrated links between ethical thought of More, Cudworth and Smith and moral sentimentalism, I outline some links between the Cambridge Platonists and Scottish thinkers in both the seventeenth century and the eighteenth century. I then discuss Hume's knowledge of Cudworth, in Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals, Enquiry concerning Human Understanding, The (...)
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  • Animal souls, metempsychosis, and theodicy in seventeenth-century English thought.Peter Harrison - 0081 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 31 (4):519-544.
  • Newtonian, Converso, and Deist: The Lives of Jacob (Henrique) de Castro Sarmento.Matt Goldish - 1997 - Science in Context 10 (4):651-675.
    The ArgumentJacob de Castro Sarmento was a descendent of New Christians in Portugal who made his way to London in the early eighteenth century. There he professed Judaism openly, but he also advanced his scientific and medical pursuits, becoming particularly enamored of the Newtonian world view. This paper argues that Sarmento's attachment to Judaism was essentially a function of his personal relationship with Hakham David Nieto, and that Sarmento's Judaism was never really the full synthesis of scientific outlook and Jewish (...)
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  • Hobbes on the Order of Sciences: A Partial Defense of the Mathematization Thesis.Zvi Biener - 2016 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 54 (3):312-332.
    Accounts of Hobbes’s ‘system’ of sciences oscillate between two extremes. On one extreme, the system is portrayed as wholly axiomtic-deductive, with statecraft being deduced in an unbroken chain from the principles of logic and first philosophy. On the other, it is portrayed as rife with conceptual cracks and fissures, with Hobbes’s statements about its deductive structure amounting to mere window-dressing. This paper argues that a middle way is found by conceiving of Hobbes’s _Elements of Philosophy_ on the model of a (...)
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  • The Legacy of Thompson Clarke.Roger Eichorn - 2020 - Sképsis: Revista de Filosofia 23 (12):148-167.
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  • Causality and Morality in Politics: The Rise of Naturalism in Dutch Seventeenth-Century Political Thought.H. W. Blom - unknown
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  • A ciência nas utopias de Campanella, Bacon, Comenius, e Glanvill.Bernardo Jefferson de Oliveira - 2002 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 43 (106):42-59.
    Este artigo analisa comparativamente o papel que a ciência e a técnica ocupam nas sociedades descritas em A cidade do Sol de Tommasio Campanella, a Nova Atlântida de Francis Bacon, Panorthosia de Jan Amós Comenius e o Complemento à Nova Atlântida de Joseph Glanvill. This article evaluates the role that science and technology plays in the societies described by early modern utopias, making a comparative analysis of Tommasio Campanella's City of Sun, Francis Bacon's New Atlantis, Jan Amós Comenius' Panorthosia, and (...)
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