Kant on Chemistry and the Application of Mathematics in Natural Science

Kantian Review 19 (3):393-418 (2014)
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Abstract

In his Metaphysische Anfangsgründe der Naturwissenschaft, Kant claims that chemistry is a science, but not a proper science (like physics), because it does not adequately allow for the application of mathematics to its objects. This paper argues that the application of mathematics to a proper science is best thought of as depending upon a coordination between mathematically constructible concepts and those of the science. In physics, the proper science that exhausts the a priori knowledge of objects of the outer sense, only motions and concepts reducible to motions can be legitimately coordinated with mathematical constructions. Since chemistry can neither achieve its own a priori principles of coordination nor be reduced to the coordinated doctrine of motion, it is a merely improper science.

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Michael Bennett McNulty
University of Minnesota

References found in this work

Kant and the Exact Sciences.William Harper & Michael Friedman - 1995 - Philosophical Review 104 (4):587.
Regulative and constitutive.Michael Friedman - 1992 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 30 (S1):73-102.
The Role of Magnitude in Kant’s Critical Philosophy.Daniel Sutherland - 2004 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 34 (3):411-441.
Kant on the impossibility of the "soft sciences".Abhaya C. Nayak & Eric Sotnak - 1995 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (1):133-151.

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