One Hundred Years of Pressure: Hydrostatics From Stevin to Newton

Cham: Springer Verlag (2017)
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Abstract

This monograph investigates the development of hydrostatics as a science. In the process, it sheds new light on the nature of science and its origins in the Scientific Revolution. Readers will come to see that the history of hydrostatics reveals subtle ways in which the science of the seventeenth century differed from previous periods. The key, the author argues, is the new insights into the concept of pressure that emerged during the Scientific Revolution. This came about due to contributions from such figures as Simon Stevin, Pascal, Boyle and Newton. The author compares their work with Galileo and Descartes, neither of whom grasped the need for a new conception of pressure. As a result, their contributions to hydrostatics were unproductive. The story ends with Newton insofar as his version of hydrostatics set the subject on its modern course. He articulated a technical notion of pressure that was up to the task. Newton compared the mathematical way in hydrostatics and the experimental way, and sided with the former. The subtleties that lie behind Newton's position throws light on the way in which developments in seventeenth-century science simultaneously involved mathematization and experimentation. This book serves as an example of the degree of conceptual change that new sciences often require. It will be of interest to those involved in the study of history and philosophy of science. It will also appeal to physicists as well as interested general readers.

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Chapters

Beyond Archimedes: Stevin’s Elements of Hydrostatics

Galileo, Floating Bodies and the Balance

A natural way of interpreting Archimedes’ account of floatation is by analogy with a balance. When a body is wholly or partially immersed in water it displaces water, which is raised as a result. Floating occurs when the tendency of the raised water to move downwards is balanced by the weight of the... see more

Newton’s Hydrostatics: Liquids as Continua

Following an early version in an unpublished manuscript, Newton included a concise version of his hydrostatics in the Principia. It was based on his identification of the property of liquids that distinguishes them from solids, namely, the inability of the former to resist distorting forces. Any por... see more

Fashioning a Novel Concept of Pressure: One Hundred Years

It is enlightening to view the history of hydrostatics in terms of the overcoming of obstacles, obstacles that can only be recognized as such in retrospect. There are three candidates for inclusion in a list of such obstacles. From Archimedes to Stevin it had been assumed that the postulates of a sc... see more

Pascal’s Equilibrium of Liquids

Hydrostatics and Experiment

This chapter is concerned with capturing exactly what is involved in the idea that the progression in hydrostatics from Stevin to Newton corresponded to the shift from the attempt to construct a science on the basis of given, unproblematic, postulates to the recognition that the adequacy of postulat... see more

Hydrostatics and the Scientific Revolution

The extent to which dealings with the world as it can be observed and manipulated is dependent on the availability of concepts up to the task has not been adequately appreciated by historians of science. Detailed attention to changes that the concept of pressure underwent in the seventeenth century ... see more

Liquids: A Challenge for Seventeenth-Century Mechanics

The construction of a science of hydrostatics in the seventeenth century came about by way of the replacement of a common sense of pressure by a technical sense of pressure. This proved to be a move that was far from obvious and much can be learnt from it about the significant changes in science tha... see more

Experimenting with Air

Developments in hydrostatics in the second half of the seventeenth century were influenced by developments in pneumatics. Those developments were very much informed by novel experiments carried out in contrived situations, beginning with Torricelli’s famous experiment with what we now know as the me... see more

Descartes’ Engagement with Hydrostatics

The young Descartes was involved in contributing to the sciences of his day, especially mechanics and optics and including a brief, unpublished, foray into hydrostatics. Such involvements persisted into his maturity, but came to play a role subsidiary to Descartes’ ambitious plan to construct an out... see more

Boyle on Mechanism and Pressure

Boyle made explicit the notion of mechanism that was implied in the science of simple machines and which he brought to bear on his pneumatics and hydrostatics. Machines bring about their effects by virtue of the way in which pushes and pulls are transmitted through them via the connection of their p... see more

The Historical Background to Stevin’s Hydrostatics

The starting point of my story is the account of hydrostatics formulated by Simon Stevin in 1586. He could take for granted a distinction between liquids and solids which formed part of everyday knowledge and which was presumed in common technologies involving the management of water. Stevin could a... see more

Pascal’s Equilibrium of Liquids

Pascal began his Equilibrium of Liquids, written around 1654, by noting some counter-intuitive experimental results. He then utilized what is now known as the hydraulic press to introduce his theory of how a liquid can function as a machine for multiplying force. A pressing at one location on the bo... see more

Beyond Archimedes: Stevin’s Elements of Hydrostatics

The content of Stevin’s hydrostatics was original and became a cornerstone of the advances in hydrostatics that were to follow it. Stevin grasped the fact that the force on a solid surface in contact with water is independent of the orientation of that surface and depends only on its depth beneath t... see more

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Citations of this work

Mechanism and Chemistry in Early Modern Natural Philosophy.Marina P. Banchetti - 2019 - Encyclopedia of Early Modern Philosophy and the Sciences.
Robert Boyle.J. J. MacIntosh - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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